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| List of Illustrations page | p. xv |
| Notes on Contributors | p. xvii |
| General Editors' Preface | p. xxv |
| Introduction | p. 1 |
| Workers and Places | |
| Amateurs and Professionals | p. 15 |
| The Preprofessional Era | p. 15 |
| Categorizing the Amateurs | p. 18 |
| The Culture of Collecting | p. 21 |
| Academicization | p. 23 |
| Att... MORE | p. 27 |
| Internal Salvation | p. 30 |
| Convergence | p. 32 |
| Discovery and Exploration | p. 34 |
| Linking Universes | p. 36 |
| Science and the Expansion of Europe | p. 39 |
| Universal Knowledge: Humboldt's Cosmos | p. 43 |
| Science and National Glory | p. 45 |
| Science and Internationalism | p. 52 |
| Looking Ahead | p. 57 |
| Museums | p. 60 |
| Museums to 1792 | p. 61 |
| The Paris Model, 1793-1809 | p. 62 |
| Impact of the Paris Model, 1810-1859 | p. 64 |
| The Museum Movement, 1860-1901 | p. 67 |
| Dioramas and Diversity, 1902-1990 | p. 73 |
| Field Stations and Surveys | p. 76 |
| Surveys in Nature | p. 78 |
| Field Stations | p. 84 |
| Universities | p. 90 |
| A Map of the Changing Terrain | p. 91 |
| The Power of Patrons | p. 95 |
| The Consequences of Institutional Location | p. 102 |
| Conclusion | p. 106 |
| Geological Industries | p. 109 |
| Mining Schools | p. 109 |
| Government Surveys | p. 111 |
| Private Surveys | p. 118 |
| Industrial Science | p. 120 |
| Geology and Industry | p. 123 |
| The Pharmaceutical Industries | p. 126 |
| Influence from Alkaloids and the Dyestuff Industry | p. 127 |
| Impact of Biological Medicines | p. 130 |
| Political and Legal Elements | p. 131 |
| Industry versus Professional Pharmacy | p. 132 |
| War as a Catalyst to Industrial Development | p. 133 |
| Industrial Growth and the Role of Research | p. 136 |
| Regulating the Industry | p. 137 |
| Consolidating the Industry | p. 139 |
| Public and Environmental Health | p. 141 |
| 1800-1890: The Health of Towns | p. 142 |
| 1890-1950: The Health of Nations | p. 150 |
| 1950-2000: World Health | p. 157 |
| Conclusion | p. 162 |
| Analysis and Experimentation | p. 167 |
| Geology | p. 167 |
| Stratigraphy: The Basic Activity of Geology | p. 171 |
| Mountains and Movement | p. 174 |
| Ice Ages and Secular Cooling of the Earth | p. 178 |
| Age and Internal Structure of the Earth | p. 179 |
| Economic Geology | p. 181 |
| Geology in the Twentieth Century | p. 182 |
| Paleontology | p. 185 |
| Cuvier, Extinction, and Stratigraphy | p. 186 |
| Paleontology and Progress | p. 188 |
| Paleontology and Evolution | p. 190 |
| Paleontology and Modern Darwinism | p. 197 |
| Paleontology and Biogeography | p. 200 |
| Museums and Paleontology | p. 201 |
| Zoology | p. 205 |
| The Natural System and Natural Theology | p. 206 |
| The Philosophical Naturalists | p. 208 |
| The Triumph of Typology | p. 211 |
| From Darwin to Evolutionary Typology | p. 214 |
| Tensions within Evolutionism | p. 218 |
| Into the Twentieth Century | p. 221 |
| Botany | p. 225 |
| Beyond Linnaeus: Systematics and Plant Geography | p. 227 |
| Botanical Gardens | p. 231 |
| The "New Botany" | p. 233 |
| Linking Field and Laboratory, Theory and Practice | p. 237 |
| Evolution | p. 243 |
| The Influence of Buffon and Linnaeus | p. 244 |
| Lamarck: The Direct and Indirect Production by Nature of All Living Bodies | p. 246 |
| After Cuvier, Oken, and Lamarck | p. 249 |
| Darwin: The Tree of Life and Natural Selection | p. 252 |
| After Darwin | p. 256 |
| Evolutionary Biology since Mendelism | p. 259 |
| Conclusion: Controversies and Contexts | p. 263 |
| Anatomy, Histology, and Cytology | p. 265 |
| Anatomy: Humans and Animals | p. 267 |
| Human Anatomy | p. 268 |
| Comparative Anatomy | p. 270 |
| Tissues and Cells | p. 274 |
| The Cell Theory | p. 275 |
| Histology | p. 279 |
| Ultrastructure | p. 282 |
| Conclusion | p. 284 |
| Embryology | p. 285 |
| Making Embryology | p. 287 |
| Histories of Development | p. 291 |
| Embryos as Ancestors | p. 294 |
| Experiment and Description | p. 298 |
| Organizers, Gradients, and Fields | p. 304 |
| Embryos, Cells, Genes, and Molecules | p. 308 |
| Embryology and Reproduction | p. 312 |
| Microbiology | p. 316 |
| Speciation, Classification, and the Infusoria | p. 317 |
| Wine, Life, and Politics: Pasteur's Studies of Fermentation | p. 320 |
| The Bacteriological Revolution | p. 323 |
| Institutionalization of Bacteriology | p. 328 |
| Between Protozoology and Tropical Diseases | p. 331 |
| Bacteriology between Botany, Chemistry, and Agriculture | p. 333 |
| Microbiology between the Brewing Industry and (Bio)chemistry | p. 335 |
| Genetics of Microorganisms and Molecular Biology | p. 337 |
| Conclusions | p. 340 |
| Physiology | p. 342 |
| Foundational Narratives | p. 342 |
| Newer Narratives | p. 351 |
| The Disappearance of Physiology? | p. 358 |
| Pathology | p. 367 |
| Pathology's Prehistory | p. 369 |
| First Transition: Tissue Pathology | p. 371 |
| Second Transition: Cellular Pathology | p. 374 |
| Third Transition: Clinical Pathology | p. 375 |
| Popular Forensic Pathology | p. 378 |
| Recent Translational Medicine | p. 379 |
| Conclusion | p. 380 |
| New Objects and Ideas | |
| Plate Tectonics | p. 385 |
| The Classical Stage of the Mobilist Controversy: From Alfred Wegener to the End of the Second World War | p. 386 |
| The Modern Controversy over Continental Drift | p. 391 |
| Geophysics and Geochemistry | p. 395 |
| The Size, Shape, and Weight of the Earth: Gravimetry and Associated Theories | p. 397 |
| Seismology | p. 402 |
| Geomagnetism | p. 405 |
| Geological Synthesis from Results of Geophysical Investigations | p. 408 |
| Chemical Analyses of Rocks and Minerals | p. 409 |
| Geochemistry | p. 410 |
| Physico-chemical Petrology | p. 412 |
| Geochemical Cycles | p. 413 |
| Mathematical Models | p. 416 |
| Physiology and Psychology | p. 419 |
| Evolution and Ecology | p. 421 |
| Development and Form | p. 425 |
| Mathematical Statistics | p. 427 |
| Integrative Modeling: An Example from the Neurosciences | p. 428 |
| Computers and Mathematical Modeling | p. 429 |
| Conclusions | p. 430 |
| Genes | p. 432 |
| Before Mendel | p. 432 |
| From Mendel to the Turn of the Century | p. 433 |
| The Development of Genetics and the Gene Concept up to World War II | p. 435 |
| Postwar Novelties: The Material of the Gene and Gene Action | p. 440 |
| The Gene in the Light of Recent Historiography | p. 444 |
| Conclusion | p. 450 |
| Ecosystems | p. 451 |
| The Study of Plant Communities | p. 453 |
| The Concept of "Biocoenosis" | p. 454 |
| The Integration of Physical Factors | p. 456 |
| The First Qualitative Outline of an Ecological System | p. 456 |
| From Plant Successions to Organicism in Ecology | p. 457 |
| Thirty Years of Controversies | p. 459 |
| Population Dynamics | p. 461 |
| The Trophic-Dynamic Aspect of Ecosystems | p. 462 |
| Odum's Fundamentals of Ecology | p. 463 |
| From Ecosystems to Global Ecology | p. 464 |
| Immunology | p. 467 |
| Immunology | p. 467 |
| Immunity as a Scientific Object | p. 468 |
| The Emergence of Immunology | p. 471 |
| The Consolidation of Immunology | p. 474 |
| Immunity as an Object for Historical Inquiry | p. 478 |
| Cancer | p. 486 |
| The Clinical Cancer: Tumors, Cells, and Diagnosis | p. 487 |
| The First Technological Disease: Cancer and Radiotherapy | p. 489 |
| Cancer as Social Disease: Voluntary Health Organizations and Big Biomedicine | p. 491 |
| Cancer as a Biological Problem | p. 494 |
| Routine Experimentation: Chemotherapy and Clinical Trials | p. 498 |
| Cancer Numbers: Risk and the Biomedicalization of Everyday Life | p. 499 |
| Conclusion: The Cancer Cell after a Century? | p. 502 |
| The Brain and the Behavioral Sciences | p. 504 |
| Ghosts and Machines: Descartes, Kant, and Beyond | p. 505 |
| The Piano that Plays Itself: From Gall to Helmholtz | p. 507 |
| Imagining Building Blocks: From Language to Reflex | p. 510 |
| Electricity, Energy, and the Nervous System from Galvani to Sherrington | p. 513 |
| Haunted by Our Past: The Brain in Evolutionary Time | p. 516 |
| The Subject Strikes Back: Hysteria and Holism | p. 519 |
| Technological Imperatives and the Making of "Neuroscience" | p. 521 |
| History of Biotechnology | p. 524 |
| The Early History | p. 528 |
| From Zymotechnics to Biotechnics | p. 530 |
| Biochemical Engineering | p. 533 |
| Molecular Biology | p. 535 |
| Science and Culture | p. 541 |
| Religion and Science | p. 541 |
| A Victorian Rubric | p. 542 |
| Freethought | p. 545 |
| Natural Theology | p. 547 |
| Earth History | p. 550 |
| Darwin | p. 553 |
| The Conflict | p. 556 |
| Beyond "Religion and Science" | p. 559 |
| Biology and Human Nature | p. 563 |
| Mind and Brain | p. 565 |
| Evolution, Psychology, and the Social Sciences | p. 568 |
| Human Origins and Social Values | p. 573 |
| Biology and Gender | p. 576 |
| Heredity and Genetic Determinism | p. 579 |
| Experimentation and Ethics | p. 583 |
| Before Claude Bernard | p. 584 |
| Animals and the Victorians | p. 586 |
| Science in the Service of the State | p. 592 |
| The World Medical Association and Research after Nuremberg | p. 595 |
| Animals and Ethics | p. 598 |
| Living with the Past History of Human Experimentation | p. 600 |
| Environmentalism | p. 602 |
| Environmentalism and Science in the Nineteenth Century | p. 604 |
| The Emergence of the Administrative State | p. 606 |
| Entering the Twentieth Century | p. 609 |
| The Environmental Revolution | p. 613 |
| The Roles and Authority of Science | p. 617 |
| Politics and Science | p. 619 |
| Popular Science | p. 622 |
| The "Dominant View" and Its Critics | p. 622 |
| Nineteenth-Century Popular Science Writing | p. 624 |
| The Early Twentieth Century | p. 627 |
| Later Developments | p. 631 |
| Index | p. 635 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |