13554 Search Results
A brief portrait of the Institute and its role in widening the scope of the history of science.
Go to ArticleWorkshop | Apr 11-Apr 12, 2019
Power in Medicine: Interrogating the Place of Medical Knowledge in the Modern Middle East
Dept. III
More
Doctors of "L’Esprit nouveau": Human Energetics and the Formation of the French Avant-garde
My PhD research considers the intersection of art and architectural practice within the milieu of the French periodical L’Esprit nouveau (19
The Liver in Egypt: Productions of an Organ through 20th-century Public Health and Political Economy
The Liver in Egypt chronicles the fate of Egyptian bodies, and specifically their livers, through a collection of epistemological, political, and
A Brief History of Black Holes
No 12
Late in 2018, the gravitational wave observatory, LIGO, announced that they had detected the most distant and massive source of ripples of spacetime ever monitored: waves triggered by pairs of black holes colliding in deep space.
Carla Rodrigues Almeida
More
A Brief History of Black Holes
No 12
Late in 2018, the gravitational wave observatory, LIGO, announced that they had detected the most distant and massive source of ripples of spacetime ever monitored: waves triggered by pairs of black holes colliding in deep space.
Carla Rodrigues Almeida
More
Direktorin Dagmar Schäfer über das Wissen chinesischer Bauern über das Kranzbergsche fünfte Gesetz
Zum ArtikelDagmar Schäfer writes for Society for the History of Technology on Kranzberg's fifth law of technology
Read ArticleDealing with Devil Has Long Been a Part of Medicine
No 13
Thirty children in Amsterdam began to show signs of a disturbing affliction in the winter of 1566. The symptoms would strike without warning: the children would at first be seized by a violent frenzy, then fall to the ground, their bodies wracked with painful convulsions. Once the fits had passed, the children reported no memory of them.
Laura Sumrall
More
Dealing with Devil Has Long Been a Part of Medicine
No 13
Thirty children in Amsterdam began to show signs of a disturbing affliction in the winter of 1566. The symptoms would strike without warning: the children would at first be seized by a violent frenzy, then fall to the ground, their bodies wracked with painful convulsions. Once the fits had passed, the children reported no memory of them.
Laura Sumrall
More