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    <title>Revue d’histoire des sciences | Cairn.info</title>
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    <updated>2025-11-20T00:00:00+01:00</updated>

                <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_782</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Malebranche and the sciences
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2025/2 Tome 78)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-dhistoire-des-sciences-2025-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-11-13T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2025-11-20T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Créée en&#160;1947 par Henri Berr, la Revue d’histoire des
sciences est un périodi­que à comité de lecture. Généraliste dans
son domaine, elle traite de l’ensemble des époques et disciplines.
Elle est orientée vers l’histoire concep­tuelle des sciences mais
cependant ouverte à d’autres approches, institution­nelle ou
sociologique par exemple.</p>
<p>Désormais semestrielle, elle publie, en français ou en anglais,
dans des dos­siers thématiques ou en varia, des articles présentant
les résultats inédits de travaux de recherche en histoire des
sciences et épistémologie historique ainsi que des études de
synthèse fouillées et documentées sur des points particuliers. Elle
a également une vocation documentaire l’amenant à publier éditions
et traductions critiques commentées, revues critiques,
bibliographies et analyses d’ouvrages.</p>
]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 259 to 262| Front matter
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 263 to 267| Introduction
                                            |  Sandra Bella,  Claire Schwartz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 269 to 296| To see and to look: Optics and the metaphysics of vision according
to Nicolas Malebranche
                                            |  Philippe Hamou
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 297 to 328| The posterity of Malebranche’s natural philosophy: Inertia,
causality, the system of small vortices
                                            |  Christophe Schmit
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 329 to 365| Numbers and combinations in Malebranchist circles
                                            |  Catherine Goldstein
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 367 to 402| The infinitangular polygon in Leibnizian calculus, a general
concept of the curve? Appropriations within Malebranche’s circle
                                            |  Sandra Bella
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 403 to 436| Malebranche and mathematical intuitionism
                                            |  Claire Schwartz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 437 to 460| Is Cuvier’s notion of perfection paradoxical?
                                            |  Jitse M. van der Meer
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 461 to 488| A “highly patriotic” project or a scientific-diplomatic object:
Antônio Austregésilo Rodrigues de Lima and the idea of a Brazilian
student house in Paris in the interwar period
                                            |  Luciana Vieira,  Sílvia Fernanda de Mendonça Figueirôa
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 489 to 505| Three tributes to Everett Mendelsohn: Scientific research at
Harvard
                                            |  Claude Debru,  Armelle Debru,  Anne-Marie Moulin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 508 to 511| Richard T. W. ARTHUR, David RABOUIN, <i>Leibniz on the foundations
of the differential calculus</i> (Birkhäuser, 2025), 168 ×
240&#160;mm, XVI-288&#160;p., bibliogr., index nominum, index
rerum, table, coll. “Frontiers in the history of science”.
                                            |  François Duchesneau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 511 to 514| Jean-François BERT, Jérôme LAMY (eds.), <i>Les Cartes à jouer du
savoir: Détournements savants au XVIII<sup>e</sup>&#160;siècle</i>
(Basel: Schwabe Verlag, 2023). Collection “Heuristiques.” 246 pp.,
113 color illustrations, 1 b/w illustration, bibliography, tables.
Format: 220 × 153 mm.
                                            |  Emmylou Haffner
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 514 to 516| Jean-Luc CHAPPEY, <i>Pasteur et les antivax</i> (Marseille: Agone,
2025), Postface by Anne-Marie Moulin. Edited by Thierry Discepolo.
Collection “L’Épreuve des faits.” 300 pp., bibliographic
references, index, tables. Format: 140 × 210 mm.
                                            |  Jonathan Simon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 516 to 518| Béatrice DELAURENTI, Nicolas WEILL-PAROT (eds.), <i>L’Action à
distance: Au Moyen Âge et au-delà</i> (éditions Jérôme Millon,
2024), 160 × 240&#160;mm, 166&#160;p., bibliogr., table.
                                            |  Sabine Rommevaux-Tani
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 518 to 520| Simon DUMAS PRIMBAULT, <i>Un galiléen d’encre et de papier: Une
histoire matérielle des brouillons de Vincenzio Viviani
(1622-1703)</i> (Éditions de la Sorbonne, 2024), 160 × 240&#160;mm,
318&#160;p., 57&#160;fig., bibliogr., index rerum, index nominum,
tables, coll. “Homme et société”.
                                            |  Martha Cecilia Bustamante
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 520 to 522| Yves GINGRAS, William R. SHEA, <i>L’Ambassadeur de Galilée</i>
(Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 2025), 150 × 220&#160;mm, 296&#160;p.,
ill., bibliogr.
                                            |  Laurence Bouquiaux
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 522 to 525| Emmanuel KANT, <i>Pensées sur la véritable évaluation des forces
vives</i>, ed. by Stefano Veneroni, introd. by Michel Blay (Sesto
San Giovanni, Italy: Éditions Mimésis, 2024). Collection
“Philosophie.” 330 pp., bibliography. Format: 140 × 210 mm.
                                            |  Mathieu Gibier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 525 to 527| Guillaume LINTE, <i>Hygiène navale et médecine des colonies en
France (XVI<sup>e</sup>-XVIII<sup>e</sup>&#160;siècle)</i> (Paris:
Les Indes Savantes, 2023), 155 × 240&#160;mm, 366&#160;p., ill.,
bibliogr., 2&#160;indexes, tables.
                                            |  Cécile Sanchez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 528 to 529| Gérard-Luc NÉOUZE, <i>Émile Maupas, 1842-1916: Le savant de la
casbah d’Alger</i> (Saint-Étienne: Les Éditions de l’Officine,
2024), préface Jean-Pierre Dedet, 170 × 240&#160;mm, 144&#160;p.,
38&#160;fig., bibliogr., table.
                                            |  Laurent Loison
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 529 to 531| Mathilde TAHAR, <i>Du finalisme en biologie: Bergson et la théorie
de l’évolution</i> (Presses universitaires de France, 2024), 135 ×
215&#160;mm, 406&#160;p., 9&#160;fig., bibliogr., tables.
                                            |  Doudja Boumaza
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 531 to 533| Pierre VERSCHUEREN, <i>Des savants aux chercheurs: Les sciences
physiques comme métier (1945-1968)</i> (Paris: ENS Éditions, 2024),
préface Christophe Charle, 155 × 232&#160;436 pp., 16 figures, 8
tables, bibliography, 3 indexes, tables. Format: 155 × 232 mm.
                                            |  Néstor Herran
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 535 to 536| Back matter
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_781</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Varia
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2025/1 Tome 78)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-dhistoire-des-sciences-2025-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-05-13T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2025-05-30T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 1 to 4| Front matter
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 70| The “manufacture of knowledge ” about nutmeg trees (Myristica
Houtt.): The controversy between Fusée-Aublet and Poivre over
botanical knowledge in the Englightenment
                                            |  Guilhem Mansion,  Thibaud Martinetti
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 71 to 103| The primacy of induction for phytosociology in Uppsala (1918–1940):
Transdisciplinary convergence
                                            |  Fabrice Roux
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 105 to 140| <i>Wissenschaft keine reine Verstandessache</i>: Ernst Mach and the
Vienna Circle
                                            |  Corto Santantonio
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 141 to 177| The origin of Wilsonian renormalisation
                                            |  Sébastien Rivat
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 179 to 235| Monge’s <i>Traité des ombres</i>: A critical annotated edition
                                            |  Dominique Raynaud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 238 to 239| Raphaële ANDRAULT, <i>Le Fer ou le feu: Penser la douleur après
Descartes</i> (Paris: Classiques Garnier, 2024), 150 × 220 mm, 390
p., bibliography, index nominum, index rerum, coll. “Les Anciens et
les Modernes: Études de philosophie”.
                                            |  Élodie Boissard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 239 to 243| Wolfgang U. ECKART, Robert FOX (eds.), Blockades of the mind:
Science, academies, and the aftermath of the Great War, journal
<i>Acta historica Leopoldina</i>, 78 (2021), 170 × 240 mm, 169 p.,
2 b/w fig., 3 color fig., 5 tables, bibliography, index nominum.
                                            |  Christophe Eckes
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_772</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Margaret Cavendish: A new order in nature?
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2024/2 Volume 77)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2024-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2024-11-06T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2024-11-12T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 217 to 223| Introduction
                                            |  Anne-Lise Rey
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 225 to 247| Margaret Cavendish’s Critique of Robert Hooke in <i>The Blazing
World</i>
                                            |  Line Cottegnies
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 249 to 276| The Medical Roots of Margaret Cavendish’s Matter Theory
                                            |  Justin Begley
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 277 to 306| Nature’s Poetry and Humanity’s Artifice: Cavendish on the Role of
the Imagination in Natural Philosophy
                                            |  Julia Borcherding
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 307 to 340| What scepticism for Margaret Cavendish? Cavendish’s knowledge
probabilism and that of the Royal Society
                                            |  Dinh-Vinh Colomban
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 341 to 353| First part of Margaret Cavendish’s <i>Grounds of natural
philosophy</i>
                                            |  Anne-Lise Rey
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 355 to 357| Auguste Bertholet, <i>Aux racines de la pensée écologique: Erico
Nicola (1907-2001)</i>, foreword by Jean-Claude Badoux, afterword
by Jacques Grinevald, writings by Erico Nicola (Lausanne: Épistémé,
2023), 14 × 20.5 cm, 256 pages, 28 color ills, bibliogr., table,
coll. “Écologie”.
                                            |  Patrick Matagne
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 357 to 360| Laura Bossi, Nicolas Wanlin (eds.), <i>Haeckel et les Français:
Réception, interprétation et malentendus</i> (Paris: Gallimard,
2024), proceedings of the Treilles symposium, September 23-28,
2019, 14 × 20.5 cm, 480 pages, 23 color ills, bibliogr. ref.,
table, coll. “Les cahiers de la NRF”.
                                            |  Emmanuel d&#039;Hombres
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 360 to 362| Céline Frigau Manning, <i>Ce que la musique fait à l’hypnose: Une
relation spectaculaire au XIX<sup>e</sup> siècle</i> (Dijon: Les
Presses du Réel, 2021), 17 × 24 cm, 378 pages, 30 ill., bibliogr.,
index, coll. “Œuvres en société”.
                                            |  Sophie Panziera
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 362 to 363| Alain Giret, <i>Pierre Perrault: Le père de l’hydrologie</i>
(Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2023), 15.5 × 24 cm, 192
pages, 10 figs, bibliogr., table, coll. “Histoire”.
                                            |  Félix Lafond
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 364 to 365| Werner Albert Golder (ed.), <i>Celsus und die antike Wissenschaft:
Lateinisch-griechisch-deutsch</i> (Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter,
2019), 11,7 × 17,3 cm, 912 pages, bibliogr., tables, index, coll.
“Sammlung Tusculum”.
                                            |  Brigitte Maire
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 365 to 368| Florian Laguens, <i>Eddington philosophe: La nature et la portée de
la science physique</i> (Paris: Éditions de la Sorbonne, 2023),
foreword by Michel Bitbol, 16 × 24 cm, 326 pages, bibliogr., index
nominum, table, coll. “Logique, langage, sciences, philosophie”.
                                            |  Christian Bracco
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 368 to 370| Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, <i>Dynamica de potentia et legibus
naturae corporeae, tentamen scientiae novae</i>, ed. Andrea Costa,
Michel Fichant, Enrico Pasini (Georg Olms, 2023), 3 vols. (I, II.1,
II.2), 24.6 × 17.4 cm, 646-378-396 pp.
                                            |  Laurence Bouquiaux
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 370 to 372| Robert Locqueneux, Bernard Maitte, <i>Une histoire des images du
monde: D’Hésiode à Stephen Hawking</i> (Paris: AFA / Ciel &amp;
espace, 2020), 16,3 × 24 cm, 397 pages, réf. bibliogr.
                                            |  Efthymios Nicolaïdis
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 372 to 374| Michel Morange, <i>Contre les vaccins&#160;? La mécanique des
doutes sur la vaccination</i>, Belin, 2024, 160 pages
                                            |  Clémence Guillermain
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 374 to 376| Marc Parmentier, <i>Archives du virtuel, Vrin, 2023, 848 pages</i>
                                            |  Franck Varenne
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 377 to 378| Yann Piot, <i>Jean-Antoine Nollet, artisan expérimentateur: Un
discours technique au XVIII<sup>e</sup> siècle</i> (Paris:
Classiques Garnier, 2019), 15 × 22 cm, 339 pages, bibliogr., index
nominum, table, coll. “L’Europe des Lumières”.
                                            |  Hugues Chabot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 378 to 380| Rosa Piro, <i>Glossario leonardiano: Nomenclatura dell’anatomia nei
disegni della Collezione reale di Windsor</i> (Florence: Leo S.
Olschki, 2019), 17 × 24 cm, xlii-550 pages, 5 ills, index, coll.
“Biblioteca leonardiana: Studi e documenti”.
                                            |  Jacqueline Vons
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_771</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Varia
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2024/1 Volume 77)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2024-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2024-05-29T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2024-06-17T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 6| Editorial
                                            |  Stéphane Tirard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 40| Protoplasmic organization and cellular physiology according to
Claude Bernard
                                            |  François Duchesneau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 41 to 60| The concept of community and the ecological project of Eugen
Warming (1841–1924)
                                            |  Patrick Matagne
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 61 to 100| Geological reflexivity in modern sciences: Human geological agency
(19th – early 20th c.)
                                            |  Pierre de Jouvancourt
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 101 to 131| Why Eratosthenes’ measurement of the Earth’s circumference can be
at the same time so accurate and on the other hand so imprecise?
                                            |  Jean-Marc Paturle
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 133 to 169| Évariste Galois’s physics copy for the École Préparatoire exams in
1829: A probe to explore physics as a school subject
                                            |  Aurélien Gautreau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 171 to 183| An interview with Michel MORANGE, History of science and biography:
The case of Louis Pasteur
                                            |  Michel Morange
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 185 to 185| List of book reviews published in this issue
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 186 to 210| Jean-Pascal Anfray (ed.), <i>Correspondance René Descartes – Henry
More&#160;: 1648-1655,</i> bilingual Latin-French ed., preceded by
a presentation by J.-P. Anfray, “Étendue, corps et esprit&#160;: Le
dualisme en questions” (Paris: Éliott, 2023), 15 × 22 cm, 422 p.,
bibliogr., index nominum, coll. “Réflexion faite”
                                            |  François Duchesneau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 188 to 191| Sandra Bella, <i>La (Re)construction française de l’analyse
infinitésimale de Leibniz</i> (Paris: Classiques Garnier, 2022), 15
× 22 cm, 548 p., bibliogr., index nominum, 82 fig., coll. “Histoire
et philosophie des sciences”.
                                            |  Alain Bernard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 191 to 193| Jenny Boucard, Christophe Eckes (eds.), <i>Arranger, disposer,
combiner&#160;: Théories de l’ordre dans les sciences, les arts
d’ornement et la philosophie</i> (Paris: Hermann, 2023), 17 × 24,4
cm, 440 p., coll. “InterSciences”.
                                            |  Olivier Perru
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 193 to 198| Faisal Kenanah, <i>Les Animaux chez Abū Ḥayyān al-Tawḥīdī&#160;:
Classement et influences des transmissions (Aristote – Ibn
al-Biṭrīq – Ǧāḥiẓ</i>) (Bruxelles: Éditions Safran, 2023), 17 × 24
p., 219 p., bibliogr., index, table, coll. “Cultures et langues
orientales”.
                                            |  Meyssa Ben Saâd
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 198 to 205| Gregory Radick, <i>Disputed inheritance: The battle over Mendel and
the future of biology</i> (Chicago / London: The University of
Chicago Press, 2023), 630 p.
                                            |  Laurent Loison
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 205 to 207| Sébastien Richard, <i>Histoire philosophique de la physique</i>
(Paris: Vrin, 2022), 14 × 20 cm, 588 p., bibliogr., index.
                                            |  Charly Mobers
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 207 to 210| Sabine Rommevaux-Tani (ed.), <i>De sex inconvenientibus&#160;:
Traité anonyme de philosophie naturelle du xive siècle</i>
(Paris&#160;: Vrin, 2022), 15.8 × 23.8 cm, 385 pp., bibliogr., 3
index, table, series “Textes philosophiques du Moyen Âge.”
                                            |  Daniel A. Di Liscia
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_762</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Pascal as geometer: Infinity and space
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2023/2 Volume 76)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2023-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2023-06-27T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2023-12-27T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 219 to 224| Presentation: Four hundred; or what we can still learn about Pascal
in the history of mathematics
                                            |  João Cortese,  David Rabouin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 225 to 266| Dettonville and the given
                                            |  Sébastien Maronne
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 267 to 301| “Incommensurability is not to be feared:” On the general method for
the centres of gravity in <i>The Letters of A. Dettonville</i>
                                            |  João Cortese,  David Rabouin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 303 to 340| The indefinite in Pascal’s Treatises on roulette; his ontology,
sources and posterity
                                            |  Jean Dhombres
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 341 to 374| Some Thoughts on Pascal’s and Galileo’s “Indivisibles” and the
Infinite Divisibility of Extension
                                            |  Antoni Malet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 375 to 406| Pascal’s geometry and epistemology
                                            |  Valérie Debuiche,  Thomas Bellon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 407 to 445| With Pascal and against Wallis: “Geometric” demonstration and the
arithmetic of infinities (circa 1690-1692)
                                            |  Sandra Bella
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 447 to 484| One hundred years of bibliography concerning Pascal as
mathematician
                                            |  Dominique Descotes
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 485 to 485| List of book reviews published in this issue
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 486 to 488| Emanuel Bertrand, Wolf Feuerhahn, Valérie Tesnière (eds.),
<i>Éditer l’histoire des sciences (France, XX<sup>e</sup>
siècle)&#160;: Entre sciences et sciences humaines</i>
(Villeurbanne&#160;: Presses de l’Enssib, 2022), 24 cm, 274 p.,
bibliogr. notes, index, coll. “Papiers”.
                                            |  Aurélien Gautreau,  Norbert Verdier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 488 to 490| Patrice Bret, Jeanne Peiffer (eds.), <i>La Traduction comme
dispositif de communication dans l’Europe moderne</i> (Paris:
Hermann, 2020), 15 × 23 cm, 244 p., graph., index of names cited,
coll. “Histoire des sciences”.
                                            |  Danielle Fauque
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 491 to 493| Paolo Bussotti, Brunello Lotti, <i>Cosmology in the Early Modern
Age: A Web of Ideas</i> (New York: Springer, 2023), 15,9 × 23,5 cm,
XXII-328 p., ill., bibliogr., index., coll. “Logic, Epistemology,
and the Unity of Science”.
                                            |  Laurence Bouquiaux
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 493 to 496| <i>D’Alembert académicien des sciences</i>, vol. III/11 des
<i>Œuvres complètes</i> de Jean Le Rond D’Alembert (Paris: CNRS
Éditions, 2022), ed. established by Hugues Chabot, Marie Jacob,
Irène Passeron, with the collab. of Alain Cernuschi, Michelle
Chapront-Touzé, Danielle Fauque et al., 17,5 × 24,5 cm, cclxxvi-1
258 p.
                                            |  Colette Le Lay
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 496 to 498| introduction, translation and notes Vincent BARRAS and Terpsichore
BIRCHLER, 334 p., bilingual Greek-French edition, coll. “Sources en
perspective”.
                                            |  Armelle Debru
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 498 to 501| Anke te Heesen, <i>Revolutionäre im Interview: Thomas Kuhn,
Quantenphysik und Oral History</i> (Berlin: Verlag Klaus Wagenbach,
2022), 22 cm, 236 p., ill. bibliogr. ref. “Kleine
kulturwissenschaftliche Bibliothek”, vol. 92.
                                            |  Scott A. Walter
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 501 to 503| Vincent Legeay, Victor Lefèvre (eds.), <i>De la finalité
organique&#160;: Un instrument scientifique hérité de la
métaphysique&#160;?</i> (Paris: Éditions Matériologiques, 2023),
foreword by Éric MARQUER, 16 × 24 cm, 225 p., coll. “Sciences &amp;
philosophie”.
                                            |  Clémence Guillermain
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 503 to 505| Éric Rieth, <i>Pour une histoire de l’archéologie navale : Les
bateaux et l’histoire</i> (Paris: Classiques Garnier, 2019),
foreword by Patrice POMEY, 15 × 22 cm, 431 p., 58 fig. b/w.,
glossary, bibliogr., 3 indexes, tables, coll. “Histoire des
techniques”.
                                            |  David Plouviez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 505 to 507| Martina Schiavon, Laurent Rollet (eds.), <i>Le Bureau des
longitudes au prisme de ses procès-verbaux (1795-1932)</i> (Nancy:
PUN - Éditions univ. de Lorraine, 2021), 16 × 24 cm, 385 p., ill.
in color, index of names, bibliogr., coll. “Histoire des
institutions scientifiques”.
                                            |  Danielle Fauque
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 507 to 509| Julien Técher, <i>Les Usages de l’expérience de pensée au
XVIII<sup>e</sup> siècle</i> (Paris, Classiques Garnier, 2020), 15
× 22 cm, 538 p., bibiogr., index nominum, index rerum, tables,
coll. “L’Europe des Lumières”.
                                            |  Dinh-Vinh Colomban
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 509 to 512| Anouchka Vasak, <i>1797: Pour une histoire météore</i> (Paris:
Anamosa, 2022), 22 cm, 429 p., 40 ill. b/w and color, bibliogr.
notes.
                                            |  Angélique Lemarchand
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_761</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Varia
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2023/1 Volume 76)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2023-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2023-06-15T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2023-06-27T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 6| Editorial
                                            |  Stéphane Tirard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 40| Theoretical and practical book-keeping knowledge in the fifteenth
century: Jean Adam and his treatise on arithmetic
                                            |  Stéphane Lamassé,  Olivier Mattéoni
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 41 to 83| The argonaut and the apothecary: Rhetoric and botany in the debate
around the nutmeg tree in the Isle de France (1753-1757)
                                            |  Thibaud Martinetti,  Guilhem Mansion
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 85 to 134| Numbers and taxa: Remarks on the orders, classes and genera of
algebraic curves
                                            |  François Lê
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 135 to 172| The photometry of coloured light sources, a thorny problem: The
role of two little-known scientists, Jules Macé de Lépinay and
William Nicati
                                            |  Patrick Grelet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 173 to 187| The critical edition of Buffon’s complete works: An interview with
Stéphane Schmitt
                                            |  Stéphane Schmitt
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 189 to 189| List of book reviews published in this issue
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 190 to 191| Meyssa Ben Saâd, <i>Ordonner la diversité du vivant dans le Kitāb
al-ḥayawān d’al-Ǧāḥiẓ (776-868)</i> (Bruxelles: Éditions Safran,
2022), 17 × 24 cm, 299 p., glossaire, bibliogr., index, table,
coll. “Cultures et langues orientales”
                                            |  Jean-Charles Ducène
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 191 to 192| Mario Biagioli, <i>Galilée et ses publics. Instruments, images et
culture du secret</i> (Strasbourg&#160;: Presses universitaires de
Strasbourg, 2022), French translation by Alcime Steiger, revised by
Émilie Dauphiné, foreword by Antonella Romano, 14 × 21.5 cm, 464
p., 19 figs, bibliogr., index nominum, tables
                                            |  Simon Dumas Primbault
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 193 to 195| Éric Chassefière, <i>Physique de l’environnement terrestre,
matières subtiles et hauteur de l’atmosphère. Conceptions de
l’atmosphère et nature de l’air au siècle des Lumières</i> (London:
ISTE éditions, 2022), 15,6 × 23,5 cm, 366 p., bibliogr., index
                                            |  Arnaud Mayrargue
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 195 to 199| Céline Cherici, Jean-Claude Dupont, Charles T. Wolfe (eds.),
<i>Physique de l’Esprit. Empirisme, médecine et cerveau
(XVII<sup>e</sup>-XIX<sup>e</sup> siècles)</i> (Paris: Hermann,
2018), 15,2 x 22,9 cm, 248 p., index, coll. “Histoire des sciences”
                                            |  Jean-Gaël Barbara
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 199 to 200| Olivia Chevalier (ed.), <i>Descartes et ses mathématiques</i>
(Paris&#160;: Classiques Garnier, 2022), 15 × 22 cm, 220 p.,
bibliogr. notes, index, coll. “Histoire et philosophie des
sciences”, no&#160;27
                                            |  Simon Gentil
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 201 to 203| Pierre Duhem, <i>Realtà e rappresentazione. Alle origini della
Théorie physique, Scritti 1892-1896</i> (Rome: Aracne, 2022),
édition Mirella Fortino et Jean-François Stoffel, foreword by
Stefano Bordoni, 14 × 21 cm, 608 p., série “Duhemiana”, no&#160;4;
Jean-François Stoffel, <i>Introduction à la lecture des célèbres
articles duhémiens de la</i> Revue des questions scientifiques
<i>(1892-1896)</i> (Rome: Aracne, 2022), foreword by Fábio Rodrigo
Leite, 14 × 21 cm, 176 p., série “Duhemiana”, no&#160;5
                                            |  João Cortese
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 203 to 205| Jean-Baptiste Fressoz, Fabien Locher, <i>Les Révoltes du ciel. Une
histoire du changement climatique (XV<sup>e</sup>-XX<sup>e</sup>
siècle)</i> (Paris: Éditions du Seuil, 2020), 15,4 × 23,9 cm, 320
p.
                                            |  Laura Duplaquet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 205 to 207| Michel Morange, <i>Pasteur</i> (Paris: Gallimard, 2022), 15,5 ×
22,5 cm, 423 p., 16 p. out of text, 26 illustrations,, 26 ill.,
coll. “NRF biographies”
                                            |  Laurent Loison
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 208 to 209| Philipp Roelli, <i>Latin as the Language of Science and
Learning</i> (Berlin/Boston, De Gruyter, 2021), 15,5 × 23 cm,
xiii-646 p., bibliogr., index
                                            |  Jean-Yves Guillaumin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 210 to 211| Dominique Tournès (ed.), <i>Histoire du calcul graphique</i>
(Paris: Cassini, 2022), 15 × 22,5 cm, xvi-548 p., ill., coll.
“Nouvelle Bibliothèque mathématique”
                                            |  Loïc Petitgirard
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_752</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        75 years of the <i>Revue d’histoire des sciences</i>
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2022/2 Volume 75)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2022-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2022-12-06T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2022-12-16T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 287 to 292| 75 years of the <i>Revue d’histoire des sciences</i>: Introduction
                                            |   Le comité de rédaction
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 293 to 326| The origins of the <i>Revue d’histoire des sciences</i> in its
national and international context
                                            |  Danielle Fauque
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 327 to 364| Early modern science in the <i>Revue d’histoire des sciences</i>
                                            |  David Rabouin,  Anne-Lise Rey
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 365 to 387| Optics in the <i>Revue d’histoire des sciences</i>
                                            |  Arnaud Mayrargue
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 389 to 412| The history of contemporary physics in the <i>Revue d’histoire des
sciences</i>
                                            |  Christian Bracco
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 413 to 443| The history of geology in the <i>Revue d’histoire des sciences</i>
from 1947 to 2022
                                            |  Pierre Savaton
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 445 to 474| The history of natural history and evolution in the <i>Revue
d’histoire des sciences</i>
                                            |  Stéphane Tirard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 475 to 509| Styles and models for the history of the life sciences: <i>Revue
d’histoire des sciences</i> (1947-2022)
                                            |  François Duchesneau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 511 to 538| Book reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_751</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        The Museum as an object for history
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2022/1 Volume 75)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2022-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2022-06-01T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2022-06-13T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 6| Editorial
                                            |  Stéphane Tirard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 33| Presentation: Archive(s), memory, histories of the National Museum
of Natural History
                                            |  Arnaud Hurel,  Claude Blanckaert
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 35 to 69| How to name the human line of descent? From the order of the
Bimanes to the subtribe of homininans
                                            |  Mathilde Lequin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 71 to 104| “A different ethnic world”: Cro-Magnon man, the idea of progress,
and the dialectics of modernity within prehistory
                                            |  Claude Blanckaert
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 105 to 132| An <i>invisible technician</i> at the Jardin du roi: Jean-Nicolas
Collignon (1762–circa 1788); the king’s first voyaging gardene
                                            |  Laurence Lippi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 133 to 158| The introduction of photography into the laboratories of the Paris
natural history museum in the nineteenth century: A new tool for
scientific practices
                                            |  Lisa Lafontaine
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 159 to 195| The zoological research of Jacob Theodor Klein (1685-1759) and its
reception in France: A measured opposition to Linnaeaism
                                            |  Stéphane Schmitt
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 197 to 229| Bergson’s theory in the aphasiology controversies from 1906 to 1950
in France
                                            |  Laurent Fedi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 231 to 245| Vernadsky’s “French period”: A politico-scientific project
                                            |  Léo Coutellec
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 247 to 279| Book reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_742</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Émilie Du Châtelet (1706-1749), philosopher of science
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2021/2 Volume 74)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2021-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2021-12-07T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2021-12-17T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 233 to 234| Editorial
                                            |  Stéphane Tirard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 235 to 263| Presentation: Émilie Du Châtelet’s innovative philosophy of science
                                            |  Anne-Lise Rey
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 265 to 296| Émilie Du Châtelet’s Break from the French Newtonians
                                            |  Andrew Janiak
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 297 to 329| Du Châtelet between monadism and atomism: Matter in <i>Institutions
de physique</i>
                                            |  Guillaume Coissard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 331 to 355| Émilie Du Châtelet on Space and Time
                                            |  Andrea Reichenberger
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 357 to 379| The new scientific manuscripts of Émilie Du Châtelet: Light and
optics
                                            |  Michel Toulmonde
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 381 to 405| The occult and tarantism in Holland in the seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries: The work of Wolferd Senguerd (1646-1724)
                                            |  Manuel De Carli
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 407 to 439| Conceptions of the atmosphere and the nature of the air in the
eighteenth century: Descartes’ heritage
                                            |  Éric Chassefière
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 441 to 466| The authoritarian turn as opening up new possibilities: The
trajectories of physicians under Stalin
                                            |  Grégory Dufaud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 467 to 502| Book reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_741</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Varia
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2021/1 Volume 74)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2021-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2021-06-08T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2021-06-16T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 6| Editorial
                                            |  Stéphane Tirard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 40| Nerves, sensibility and motricity in the late medieval period (13th
to 15th&#160;centuries): Between natural philosophy, physiological
theory and medical practice
                                            |  Laetitia Loviconi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 41 to 62| “An ignorant Columbus discovered the New World”: Ignorance, chance
discovery and experimentation in early modernity
                                            |  Sandrine Parageau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 63 to 84| The origin and fortunes of the Sulphur Principle in
Étienne-François Geoffroy’s “Affinity Table”: From alchemy to
phlogiston
                                            |  Bernard Joly
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 85 to 118| Obtaining Quality in Marginal Places: The Clocks and Quadrants of
the Clementinum Observatory in Prague in the 18th Century
                                            |  Sibylle Gluch
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 119 to 145| Lay and expert knowledge about a protean waste product: Clinker
(France, from the 16th to the 21st century)
                                            |  Michel Letté
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 147 to 174| Norbert Wiener’s conceptualization of organization: Between science
and ontotheology
                                            |  Baptiste Rappin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 175 to 194| Fake material: A counterfeit copy of Galileo’s <i>Sidereus
nuncius</i>
                                            |  Jérôme Lamy
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 195 to 225| Book reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_732</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Fifty years after <i>Chance and necessity</i> and <i>The Logic of
life</i>
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2020/2 Volume 73)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2020-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2020-12-02T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2020-12-14T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 173 to 181| Introduction
                                            |  Laurent Loison
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 183 to 194| Two books that marked their epoch – A personal encounter
                                            |  Hans-Jörg Rheinberger
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 195 to 204| 1970, <i>Chance and necessity</i> and <i>The Logic of life</i>:
Recollections
                                            |  Henri Buc,  Pierre-Olivier Méthot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 205 to 236| From necessity to chance to finality: The transformations of the
concept of gratuity across Jacques Monod’s intellectual career
                                            |  Laurent Loison
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 237 to 272| François Jacob and <i>The Logic of life</i>: A history of objects
in biology
                                            |  Pierre-Olivier Méthot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 273 to 302| Between chance and program: Monod, Jacob and cybernetics
                                            |  Ronan Le Roux
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 303 to 330| For a rhetorical reading of <i>Chance and necessity</i> by Jacques
Monod
                                            |  Christine Batut-Hourquebie
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 331 to 338| The archives of François Jacob, André Lwoff and Jacques Monod at
the Pasteur Institute
                                            |  Daniel Demellier,  Laurent Loison
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 339 to 361| The description of the development of the chick embryo by Volcher
Coiter (1572): Text translated into French with notes and
commentary
                                            |  Stéphane Schmitt
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 363 to 392| Book reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_731</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Varia
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2020/1 Volume 73)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2020-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2020-06-12T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2020-06-24T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 52| The eye as a pair of compasses: Viviani’s “geometrical mechanics”
in support of Brunelleschi’s dome
                                            |  Simon Dumas Primbault
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 53 to 87| Descriptive geometry by and for coachbuilders: An example of the
appropriation of mathematical knowledge by a trade in the
nineteenth century
                                            |  Thomas Preveraud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 89 to 116| Brother Marie-Victorin (1885-1944) and evolution
                                            |  Olivier Perru
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 117 to 130| The perspectives of history and philosophy on medicine and health
                                            |  Stéphane Tirard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 131 to 167| Book reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_722</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Varia
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2019/2 Volume 72)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2019-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2019-12-10T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2020-01-14T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 221 to 254| The places of work of the chemist Pierre Joseph Macquer
(1718-1784): Laboratories and instruments
                                            |  Christine Lehman
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 255 to 272| Hector Léveillé (1863-1918), missionary and botanist
                                            |  Samuel Gicquel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 273 to 308| The evolution of engineers’ formulation of the
electrical-mechanical analogy from 1920 to 1960
                                            |  Hélène Gaget
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 309 to 347| A philosophical reflection on industrial heritage: From
pluridisciplinarity to interdisciplinarity
                                            |  Marina Gasnier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 349 to 380| Jean Gayon (1949-2018): The itinerary of a Darwinist
                                            |  Victor Petit
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 381 to 409| The contribution of the laboratories of the Institut Henri Poincaré
to the war effort: October 1939 – May-June 1940
                                            |  Christophe Eckes
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 411 to 451| Book reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_721</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        On Leibniz’s <i>Dynamics</i>
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2019/1 Volume 72)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2019-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2019-06-13T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2019-06-21T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 9| Introduction
                                            |  Vincenzo De Risi,  David Rabouin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 11 to 30| Is Leibniz’s dynamics consistent with his monadology?
                                            |  Daniel Garber
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 31 to 37| The metaphysical stakes of the dynamics
                                            |  Anne-Lise Rey
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 39 to 62| Architectonic principles in Leibniz’s <i>Dynamica</i>
                                            |  François Duchesneau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 63 to 85| Equivalence of hypotheses and Galilean censure in Leibniz: A
conspiracy or a way to moderate censure?
                                            |  Laurynas Adomaitis
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 87 to 135| Dynamics and pneumatics in Leibniz: Confronting Huygens’s paradoxal
experiments
                                            |  Mathieu Gibier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 137 to 161| The critical edition of Leibniz’s <i>Dynamica de potentia seu de
legibus naturæ corporeæ</i>
                                            |  Andrea Costa,  Enrico Pasini
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 163 to 169| <i>Complete Works</i> of Georges Canguilhem
                                            |  Laurent Loison
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 171 to 220| Book reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_712</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Canguilhem and biology
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2018/2 Volume 71)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2018-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2018-12-06T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2018-12-18T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 147 to 154| Introduction: Biology, philosophy of biology, and history of
biology in the work of Georges Canguilhem (1904–1995)
                                            |  Laurent Loison
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 155 to 177| Biology, reflexivity, and history: Canguilhem in his milieu
                                            |  Isabel Gabel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 179 to 204| Canguilhem and Goldstein: From the normativity of life to the
normativity of knowledge
                                            |  Ivan Moya Diez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 205 to 241| Georges Canguilhem and the “problem of evolution” in <i>Le Normal
et le pathologique</i>
                                            |  Pierre-Olivier Méthot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 243 to 270| Of the science of monsters: Canguilhem and the experimental
teratology of Étienne Wolff
                                            |  Matteo Vagelli
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 271 to 300| A paradoxical enthusiasm? Georges Canguilhem and molecular biology
(1966–1973)
                                            |  Laurent Loison
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 301 to 310| Philosophy and biology: <i>La Connaissance de la vie</i> and
Canguilhem’s teaching at the faculty of letters of Strasbourg
(1941–1948)
                                            |  Claude Debru
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 311 to 317| Jean Gayon (1949–2018)
                                            |  Philippe Huneman
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 319 to 350| Book reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_711</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Varia
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2018/1 Volume 71)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2018-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2018-06-18T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2018-06-28T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 24| Aristotle as the father of scientific astrophysics
                                            |  Marie-Noëlle Ribas
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 25 to 48| Smallpox inoculation in Lyon: From condemnation to acceptance
(1779-1811)
                                            |  Serge Boarini
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 49 to 77| Competition, controversies and microbial cultures: The development
of the antiplague serum between Paris and India (1894-1899)
                                            |  Matheus Alves Duarte da Silva
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 79 to 109| Einstein about the block-universe
                                            |  Joël Dolbeault
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 111 to 140| Book reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_702</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Archives of sciences: A contribution to the history of psychiatry
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2017/2 Volume 70)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2017-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2018-01-15T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2018-01-24T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 255 to 273| Introduction&#160;: Psychiatry and its archives, between history
and epistemology
                                            |  Elisabetta Basso,  Mireille Delbraccio
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 275 to 297| Archiving psychiatry’s past: Emil Kraepelin’s archive and papers
                                            |  Eric J. Engstrom,  Wolfgang Burgmair,  Matthias M. Weber
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 299 to 326| The Venetian mental asylum of San Servolo&#160;: Plots,
categorisations, subjects (1840-1877)
                                            |  Egidio Priani
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 327 to 350| Use and misuse of the notion of fore runner in the history of
science and technology, particularly in the history of
psychiatry&#160;: An epistolary exchange between Henri Ellenberger
and Georges Canguilhem (1967)
                                            |  Emmanuel Delille
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 351 to 377| An archive for the history of scholarly networks in the 20th
century&#160;: Georges Lantéri-Laura (1930-2004) and the
«&#160;Encyclopédie médico-chirurgicale&#160;»
                                            |  Emmanuel Delille
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 379 to 396| The CAPHÉS documentary center&#160;: A place for archives
                                            |  Nathalie Queyroux
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 397 to 426| Ernst Cassirer’s philosophy of quantum physics reconsidered
                                            |  Philippe Stamenkovic
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 427 to 451| Book reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_701</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Science and Medicine between East Asia and Europe (17th-20th
Centuries)
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2017/1 Volume 70)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2017-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2017-07-11T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2017-08-16T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 13| Introduction
                                            |  Catherine Jami
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 15 to 46| From the Jesuits’&#160;treatises to the imperial compendium: The
appropriation of the Tychonic system in seventeenth and
eighteenth-century China
                                            |  Longfei Chu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 47 to 78| Converging interests and scientific circulation between Paris and
Beijing (1685-1735): The path towards a new Qing cartographic
practice
                                            |  Mario Cams
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 79 to 108| The surgeon’s acupuncturist: Philipp Franz von Siebold’s encounter
with Ishizaka Sōtetsu and nineteenth century Japanese acupuncture
                                            |  Mathias Vigouroux
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 109 to 145| Geometry Textbooks in Meiji Japan (1868-1912): Evidence of
Revolutions in Books and in the Teaching of Mathematics
                                            |  Marion Cousin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 147 to 174| From Erythrophobia to Taijinkyōfushō: The Circulation and
Elaboration of a Psychiatric Diagnosis between Europe, the United
States and Japan (from the 1890s to the 1930s)
                                            |  Sarah Terrail-Lormel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 175 to 216| The Psychology of the Scientific Mind in the Works of Bachelard and
his Predecessors
                                            |  Laurent Fedi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 217 to 236| «&#160;Only God is glorified&#160;»: Science and Religion in the
Work of Henri Devaux (1862-1956)
                                            |  Benjamin Le Roux
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 237 to 248| Book Reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_692</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Varia
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2016/2 Volume 69)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2016-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2016-12-19T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2017-01-04T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 209 to 243| Leonardo da Vinci and the Knowledge of Engineers
                                            |  Cesare S. Maffioli
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 245 to 258| True and False Sun(s) in Gassendi
                                            |  Sylvie Taussig
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 259 to 309| <i>Mathesis universalis</i> and General Algebra in Descartes’
<i>Regulae ad directionem ingenii</i>
                                            |  David Rabouin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 311 to 334| «&#160;Geometrical order&#160;» and Argumentative Setups in
Descartes’ <i>Metaphysical Meditations</i>
                                            |  Olivier Dubouclez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 335 to 368| Henri de Lacaze-Duthiers and the creation of the <i>Laboratoire de
zoologie expérimentale</i>, Roscoff, France
                                            |  Benoît Dayrat
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 369 to 398| Evolution without a Mechanism
                                            |  Emily Herring
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 399 to 401| Tribute to Claire Salomon-Bayet (1932-2016)
                                            |  Jacques Lautman
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 403 to 418| Book Reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_RHS_691</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Reorganizing Chemistry during the Interwar Period: The Role of
French Institutions and Learned Societies in National and
International Context
                    | Revue d’histoire des sciences
            (2016/1 Volume 69)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-d-histoire-des-sciences-2016-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2016-07-01T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2016-07-19T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 5 to 17| Introduction: The Origins of the Maison de la Chimie
                                            |  Danielle Fauque
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 19 to 40| Chemistry, Chemists and Rationalization under Étienne Clémentel’s
Patronage, Minister of Trade and Industry (1917-1919)
                                            |  Michel Letté
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 41 to 75| Documentation at the Heart of the Reorganization of Chemistry
during the Interwar Period: The Role of French Institutions and
Learned Societies in International Context
                                            |  Danielle Fauque
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 77 to 115| Science, celebrity, diplomacy: The Marcellin Berthelot centenary,
1927
                                            |  Robert Fox
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 117 to 136| Albin Haller, Chemistry and Politics (1918-1925)
                                            |  Erik Langlinay
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 137 to 151| Chemistry Collections at the Société d’encouragement pour
l’industrie nationale
                                            |  Serge Benoît,  Gérard Emptoz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 153 to 169| The Collection of Lavoisier’s Natural History Cabinet: Its Locus
within his Scientific Work
                                            |  Stéphane Pelucchi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 171 to 202| Book Reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
    </feed>
