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Monthly Archives: July 2017
Historia Scientiarum,No.100-No.109, TABLE OF CONTENTS
Vol.23 No.1 Article Edmund C.Berkeley as a Popularizer and an Educator of Computers and Symbolic Logic(pp.1-23) SUGIMOTO,Mai Note The Evolution of the Gender Question in the Study of Madame Lavoisier(pp.24-37) KAWASHIMA,Keiko A Survey of Geometrical Diagrams in Korean Mathematical Texts from the 17th to the 19th Century(pp.38-58) YING,Jia-Ming CONTENTS CONTENTS OF HISTORIA SCIENTIARUM, Volume 1 – Volume10 Vol.22 No.3 Article Introduction: Special Issue > Science and Soviet Political Authorities: Conflict, Cooperation, and Incongruence(pp.159-160) ICHIKAWA,Hiroshi Science as Co-Producer of Soviet Polity(pp.161-180) KOJEVNIKOV,Alexei Parallel Worlds : Formal Structures and Informal Mechanisms of Postwar Soviet Mathematics(pp.181-200) GEROVITCH,Slava Between Ideology and Science : Dialectics of Dispute on Physics in 1920s-1930s Soviet Russia(pp.201-214) KANAYAMA,Koji Soviet … Continue reading
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Historia Scientiarum, No.100-No.109
Second series : international journal of the History of Science Society of Japan ISSN:02854821 Vol. 20 No.1, Jury 2010, pp. 1- 60 No.2, December 2010, pp. 61-164 No.3, March 2011, pp.165-226 Vol. 21 No.1, Jury 2011, pp. 1-90 No.2, December 2011, pp. 91-158 No.3, March 2012, pp.159-230 Vol. 22 No.1, Jury 2012, pp. 1-62 No.2, December 2012, pp. 63-158 No.3, March 2013, pp.159-238 Vol. 23 No.1, Jury 2013, pp.1-75
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Historia Scientiarum, Vol.23 No.1, July 2013
Article 1st Page PDF(Open Access) Edmund C.Berkeley as a Popularizer and an Educator of Computers and Symbolic Logic(pp.1-23) SUGIMOTO, Mai(杉本舞) Kansai University(関西大学) Abstract This paper explores how Edmund C. Berkeley tried to instruct and popularize high-speed computers in the 1940s and 1950s and how Berkeley emphasized the connection between computers and symbolic logic. Berkeley strengthened his conviction in the significance of symbolic logic and Boolean algebra before his graduation from Harvard University and maintained this conviction for more than 30 years. Berkeley published books and articles, including Giant Brains, and sold electrical toy kits by which young boys could learn electrical circuits and their logical implications. The target audience of … Continue reading
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Historia Scientiarum Vol.23 No.1, Jury 2013
Article 1st Page PDF(Open Access) Edmund C.Berkeley as a Popularizer and an Educator of Computers and Symbolic Logic(pp.1-23) SUGIMOTO, Mai(杉本舞) Kansai University(関西大学) Abstract This paper explores how Edmund C. Berkeley tried to instruct and popularize high-speed computers in the 1940s and 1950s and how Berkeley emphasized the connection between computers and symbolic logic. Berkeley strengthened his conviction in the significance of symbolic logic and Boolean algebra before his graduation from Harvard University and maintained this conviction for more than 30 years. Berkeley published books and articles, including Giant Brains, and sold electrical toy kits by which young boys could learn electrical circuits and their logical implications. The target audience of … Continue reading
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Historia Scientiarum, No.100-No.109
Second series : international journal of the History of Science Society of Japan ISSN:02854821 Vol. 20 No.1, Jury 2010, pp. 1- 60 No.2, December 2010, pp. 61-164 No.3, March 2011, pp.165-226 Vol. 21 No.1, Jury 2011, pp. 1-90 No.2, December 2011, pp. 91-158 No.3, March 2012, pp.159-230 Vol. 22 No.1, Jury 2012, pp. 1-62 No.2, December 2012, pp. 63-158 No.3, March 2013, pp.159-238 Vol. 23 No.1, Jury 2013, pp.1-75
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Historia Scientiarum, Vol.22 No.3, July 2010
Article 1 Full Page PDF(Open Access) Introduction: Special Issue > Science and Soviet Political Authorities: Conflict, Cooperation, and Incongruence (pp.159-160) ICHIKAWA, Hiroshi Graduate School of the Integrated Arts and Sciences, Hiroshima University Article 2 1st Page PDF(Open Access) Science as Co-Producer of Soviet Polity(pp.161-180) KOJEVNIKOV, Alexei Department of History, University of British Columbia Abstract The cultural authority of science reached its peak during the period of high modernity. Various countries and societies partook in this trend, but it found its ultimate expression within the communist, Soviet-type polity. This article discusses the cultural underpinnings of this characteristic feature of Soviet society and examines one of its major ramifications, the key role … Continue reading
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Historia Scientiarum, Vol.22 No.3, July 2010
Article 1 Full Page PDF(Open Access) Introduction: Special Issue > Science and Soviet Political Authorities: Conflict, Cooperation, and Incongruence (pp.159-160) ICHIKAWA, Hiroshi Graduate School of the Integrated Arts and Sciences, Hiroshima University Article 2 1st Page PDF(Open Access) Science as Co-Producer of Soviet Polity(pp.161-180) KOJEVNIKOV, Alexei Department of History, University of British Columbia Abstract The cultural authority of science reached its peak during the period of high modernity. Various countries and societies partook in this trend, but it found its ultimate expression within the communist, Soviet-type polity. This article discusses the cultural underpinnings of this characteristic feature of Soviet society and examines one of its major ramifications, the key role … Continue reading
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Historia Scientiarum, Vol.20 No.1, Jury 2010
Article 1 1st Page PDF(Open Access) How Physical Laws Were Understood in Mid-19th Century East Asia : A Comparative Study of Choe Han-gi and Nishi Amane(pp.1-20) KIM,Sungkhun Office for History of Science and Technology, University of California, Berkley Abstract This article analyzes the work of two Neo-Confucianists, Choe Han-gi (1803-1877) and Nishi Amane (1829-1897), who endeavored to construct the metaphysical ground of modern scientific knowledge in Korea and Japan during the mid-19th century. The influx of Western scientific knowledge into East Asia triggered a reinterpretation of Neo-Confucianism, which had been the main body of traditional knowledge. Nishi and Choe designed the philosophical underpinning that allowed acceptance of modern Western … Continue reading
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Historia Scientiarum, Vol.20 No.1, Jury 2010
Article 1 1st Page PDF(Open Access) How Physical Laws Were Understood in Mid-19th Century East Asia : A Comparative Study of Choe Han-gi and Nishi Amane(pp.1-20) KIM,Sungkhun Office for History of Science and Technology, University of California, Berkley Abstract This article analyzes the work of two Neo-Confucianists, Choe Han-gi (1803-1877) and Nishi Amane (1829-1897), who endeavored to construct the metaphysical ground of modern scientific knowledge in Korea and Japan during the mid-19th century. The influx of Western scientific knowledge into East Asia triggered a reinterpretation of Neo-Confucianism, which had been the main body of traditional knowledge. Nishi and Choe designed the philosophical underpinning that allowed acceptance of modern Western … Continue reading
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