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

Calculated Virtues
more
Child Development and Its Histories
more
Clinical Observation in Soviet Psychology
more
Cold Nuclear Fusion
more
Color Does Matter
more
Color, Vision, and the Eye
more
The Averroist Turn and the Rise of "Empiricism"
more
Concepts as Technologies
more
Confessionalization of Medicine
more
Controversies on Crisis in Psychology
more
CRC 980 Epistemes in Motion
more
Crisis Debates in Psychology
more
Reflection on Science at the Starnberg Institute
more
Cross-cultural Knowledge Transfer through Translation
more
Machines That Can Talk? Animals in Historic Discourse
more
Making Euclid Practical in the Sixteenth Century
more
Scholastic Natural Science in Colonial Chile and Ecuador
more
Measuring a Patient
more
Meat, Cattle and a Capital City
more
Medical Epistemology in Renaissance Italy
more
Metaphor & Metaphysic: Henri Bergson & the Language of Epistemology in Fin-de-Siècle France
more
Moral Progress
more
Music and Transience in the Six Dynasties
more
Late Medieval Concepts of Sound and Listening
more