Alternate Text
Projects

Current & Completed

The Institute’s research projects span all eras of human history, as well as all cultures north, south, east, and west. The Institute’s projects canvass an array of scientific areas, ranging from the origins of continuity systems in Mesopotamia to present-day neuroscience, Renaissance natural history, and the origins of quantum mechanics.

The Institute's researchers explore the changing meaning of fundamental scientific concepts (for example number, force, heredity, space) as well as how cultural developments shape fundamental scientific practices (for example argument, proof, experiment, classification). They examine how bodies of knowledge originally devised to address specific local problems became universalized.

The work of the Institute's scholars forms the basis of a theoretically oriented history of science which considers scientific thinking from a variety of methodological and interdisciplinary perspectives. The Institute draws on the reflective potential of the history of science to address current challenges in scientific scholarship.

Project List

A History of Artificial Beings
more
Agricultural Modernization and Biodiversity Conservation in the Twentieth Century
more
Ancients and Moderns: A Cultural History of Modern Science in India (1600–2000)
more
Anthropometric Data Banks
more
Atomic Food for Peace?
more
Beauty and the Microscope
more
Birthing Machines—An Introduction to Ambulant Science
more
Bourgeois Berlin and Laboratory Science
more
Calculated Virtues
more
Circulation in Nineteenth-Century France: Blood, Water, and Railroads
more
Citizen Science in the Nineteenth and Twenty-first Centuries
more
“Data Not Good Enough to See the Light of the Day”
more
Databases and Data Communities in Animal Ecology
more
Documenting Destitution: Photography and the Visual Archive of Famine in India
more
From Form to Norm: The Systematization of Values in German Design
more
Gottfried Leibniz in His World: The Making of a Savant (1672–1679)
more
How Did Computers Transform Historians’ Work?
more
Performing Brains on Screen
more
Science and Technology in Italian Postwar Cultural Journals
more
Smartness
more
Test-Bed Planets
more
The Known and the Lived: Melitta Schiller-Stauffenberg, 1903–1945
more