Radick, Gregory (Author)
When it comes to knowledge about the scientific pasts that might have been – the so-called ‘counterfactual’ history of science – historians can either debate its possibility or get on with the job. Taking the latter course means re-engaging with some of the most general questions about science. It can also lead to fresh insights into why particular episodes unfolded as they did and not otherwise. Drawing on recent research into the controversy over Mendelism in the early twentieth century, this address reports and reflects on a novel teaching experiment conducted in order to find out what biology and its students might be like now had the controversy gone differently. The results suggest a number of new options: for the collection of evidence about the counterfactual scientific past, for the development of collaborations between historians of science and science educators, for the cultivation of more productive relationships between scientists and their forebears, and for heightened self-awareness about the curiously counterfactual business of being historical.
...More
Article
Luca Tambolo;
(2020)
An unappreciated merit of counterfactual histories of science
Article
Joachim L. Dagg;
(2019)
Motives and merits of counterfactual histories of science
Chapter
González, Armando Garcia;
(2001)
Darwinism, Eugenics and Mendelism in Cuban Biological Education: 1900-1959
Article
Skopek, Jeffrey M.;
(2011)
Principles, Exemplars, and Uses of History in Early 20th-Century Genetics
Article
Ian Hesketh;
(2016)
Counterfactuals and history: Contingency and convergence in histories of science and life
Article
Joachim L. Dagg;
(2017)
How counterfactuals of Red-Queen theory shed light on science and its historiography
Article
Luca Tambolo;
(2020)
So close no matter how far: counterfactuals in history of science and the inevitability/contingency controversy
Article
Hodge, Jonathan;
(2011)
Darwinism after Mendelism: The Case of Sewall Wright's Intellectual Synthesis in His Shifting Balance Theory of Evolution (1931)
Article
Falk, Raphael;
(2006)
Mendel's Impact
Chapter
Gissis, Snait B.;
Jablonka, Eva;
(2011)
The Exclusion of Soft (“Lamarckian”) Inheritance from the Modern Synthesis
Article
Kingsland, Sharon E.;
(2007)
Maintaining Continuity through a Scientific Revolution: A Rereading of E. B. Wilson and T. H. Morgan on Sex Determination and Mendelism
Article
deJong-Lambert, William;
Krementsov, Nikolai;
(2012)
On Labels and Issues: The Lysenko Controversy and the Cold War
Book
Amir Teicher;
(2019)
Social Mendelism: Genetics and the Politics of Race in Germany, 1900-1948
Article
Thomas, Marion;
(2004)
De nouveaux territoires d'introduction du mendélisme en France: Louis Blaringhem (1878--1958), un généticien néolamarckien sur le terrain agricole
Article
Richmond, Marsha L.;
(2006)
The “Domestication” of Heredity: The Familial Organization of Geneticists at Cambridge University, 1895--1910
Article
Ankeny, Rachel A.;
(2000)
Marvelling at the Marvel: The Supposed Conversion of A. D. Darbishire to Mendelism
Article
Radick, Gregory;
(2011)
Physics in the Galtonian Sciences of Heredity
Article
Thierry Hoquet;
(2021)
Pluralizing Darwin: Making Counter-Factual History of Science Significant
Article
Daniel Gamito-Marques;
(2020)
In Praise of a Historical Storytelling Approach in Science Education
Article
Peng Dai;
Cody Tyler Williams;
Allison Michelle Witucki;
David Wÿss Rudge;
(2021)
Rosalind Franklin and the Discovery of the Structure of DNA
Be the first to comment!