Results for 'Late Nineteenth Century'

962 found
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  1. Michelle facos.Late Nineteenth Century - 1998 - Analecta Husserliana 53:123.
  2.  70
    Late Nineteenth Century Lamarckism and French Sociology.Snait Gissis - 2002 - Perspectives on Science 10 (1):69-122.
    : The transfer of modes of thought, concepts, models, and metaphors from Darwinian and Lamarckian evolutionary biology played a significant role in the mergence, constitution, and legitimization of sociology as an autonomous discipline in France at the end of the nineteenth century. More specifically, the Durkheimian group then came to be recognized as "French sociology." In the present paper, I analyze a facet of the struggle among various groups for this coveted status and demonstrate that the initial adherence (...)
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  3.  35
    A Defense of the Late Nineteenth Century White Suffrage Activists of Australia, New Zealand and Colorado.Theodora-Eliza Vacarescu - 2003 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 2 (6):73-88.
    This paper addresses the history of late nineteenth century women’s suffrage and the history of the women involved in the struggle for female enfranchisement of Australia, New Zealand, and Colorado, which have recently been the target of fervent postcolonial criticism. The paper will attempt to defend the efforts of white suffragists by deconstructing the groundlessness and, occasion- ally, the falseness of postcolonial criticism.
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  4.  20
    The Historiography of Late Nineteenth-Century American Legal History.David M. Rabban - 2003 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 4 (2).
    Although the treatment of history in late nineteenth-century American legal scholarship remains largely unexplored, two recent areas of research have discussed this subject tangentially. Historiographical critiques of the emphasis on doctrine by American legal historians typically maintain that late nineteenth-century legal scholars viewed history as disclosing an inevitable evolutionary progression from primitive to civilized forms. This "whiggish" approach, the critiques add, ignored the context and function of past law while apologetically justifying conservative existing law (...)
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  5. Late Nineteenth-Century American Liberalism: Representative Selections, 1880-1900.Louis Filler, Otis Pease, Ella Winter, Herbert Shapiro & Roy Lubove - 1964 - Science and Society 28 (3):337-340.
     
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  6. Was there a Bacteriological Revolution in late nineteenth-century medicine?Michael Worboys - 2007 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 38 (1):20-42.
    That there was a ‘Bacteriological Revolution’ in medicine in the late nineteenth-century, associated with the development of germ theories of disease, is widely assumed by historians; however, the notion has not been defined, discussed or defended. In this article a characterisation is offered in terms of four linked rapid and radical changes: a series of discoveries of the specific causal agents of infectious diseases and the introduction of Koch’s Postulates; a reductionist and contagionist turn in medical knowledge (...)
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  7.  33
    In Pursuit of Precision: The Calibration of Minds and Machines in Late Nineteenth-century Psychology.Ruth Benschop & Douwe Draaisma - 2000 - Annals of Science 57 (1):1-25.
    A prominent feature of late nineteenth-century psychology was its intense preoccupation with precision. Precision was at once an ideal and an argument: the quest for precision helped psychology to establish its status as a mature science, sharing a characteristic concern with the natural sciences. We will analyse how psychologists set out to produce precision in 'mental chronometry', the measurement of the duration of psychological processes. In his Leipzig laboratory, Wundt inaugurated an elaborate research programme on mental chronometry. (...)
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  8.  4
    Fenollosa's legacy in late nineteenth-century Japan: an American scholar's role in resurrecting the art of Japan.Hiroshi Nara - 2024 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    The book makes a critical assessment of American art theorist Ernest F. Fenollosa's work in Meiji Japan and offers the first English translation of the Bijutsu shinsetsu speech for which he became known. The author argues that Fenollosa's acclaimed reputation as the savior of traditional Japanese art may have been overestimated.
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  9.  15
    Atomism in Late Nineteenth-Century Physical Chemistry.George M. Fleck - 1963 - Journal of the History of Ideas 24 (1):106.
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  10. Strobridge Posters and Late Nineteenth-Century Melodrama.Katie Johnson - 2017 - In Laurie A. Frederik (ed.), Showing off, showing up: studies of hype, heightened performance, and cultural power. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
     
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  11. Evolutionary ideas in late nineteenth. Century English and american literary criticism.Donald Pizer - 1961 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 19 (3):305-310.
  12.  78
    Questioning scientific faith in the late nineteenth century.Frederick Gregory - 2008 - Zygon 43 (3):651-664.
    The late nineteenth century was not only a time in which religious faith was questioned in light of increasing claims of natural science. It is more accurate to see the familiar Victorian crisis of faith as but one aspect of a larger historical phenomenon, one in which the methods of both religion and science came under scrutiny. Among several examinations of the status of scientific knowledge in the waning decades of the century, the treatment of the (...)
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  13.  10
    Nietzsche's Naturalist Deconstruction of Truth: A World Fragmented in Late Nineteenth-Century Epistemology.Peter Bornedal - 2020 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    This book presents a new interpretation of Nietzsche’s discussions of truth and knowledge, covering the period from his early essay “On Truth and Lies” to his late notebooks. It views these discussions in the context of the neo-Kantian, Naturalist, Positivist, and Pragmatic schools influential in Nietzsche’s late nineteenth-century Europe.
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  14.  26
    The Last Utopians: Four Late Nineteenth-Century Visionaries and Their Legacy: by Michael Robertson, Princeton, NJ, Princeton University Press, 2018, 318 pp., £25.00/$29.95 (cloth), $19.95/£16.99.Elizabeth Ann Danto - 2021 - The European Legacy 27 (5):510-511.
    Writing about writers of utopian vision aims to understand how individual ideology motivates the creation of grand social narratives. With this goal in mind, Michael Robertson has selected four whi...
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  15.  36
    "Philosophy" or "Religion"? The Confrontation with Foreign Categories in Late Nineteenth-Century Japan.Gerard Clinton Godart - 2008 - Journal of the History of Ideas 69 (1):71-91.
    This article investigates how late nineteenth century Japanese philosophers responded to large categories of ideas imported from the West and for which there were no Japanese equivalents; mainly "science," "religion," and "philosophy." Discussions on whether Buddhism or Confucianism would fall under "philosophy" or "religion" accompanied a re-categorization of ideas. Some philosophers made elaborate reconstructions of Buddhism and Confucianism as modern philosophies. However, over time, Japanese categorizations of Buddhism and Confucianism shifted from "philosophy" (tetsugaku) to "thought" (shisō). Investigating (...)
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  16.  13
    Child care or child neglect?: Baby farming in late-nineteenth-century philadelphia.Sherri Broder - 1988 - Gender and Society 2 (2):128-148.
    This article examines baby farming as an urban neighborhood-based system of group child care in Philadelphia in the late nineteenth century and considers the dangers and abuses the practice of baby farming posed for parents, children, and baby farmers. It explores reformers' early efforts to regulate the city's baby farms. Finally, the essay also investigates the ways in which the residents of Philadelphia's poor neighborhoods monitored the child-care establishments in their communities that catered to working mothers.
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  17.  12
    Transmitting the Ideal of Enlightenment: Chinese Universities Since the Late Nineteenth Century.Ricardo K. S. Mak, Ricardo K. S. Mak, Guangxin Fan, Chan-fai Cheung, Michael Wing-hin Kam, Eva Kit Wah Man, Lauren Pfister, Timothy Man Kong Wong & Ka-che Yip - 2009 - Upa.
    This book is a collection of articles on different aspects of university education in China since the late nineteenth century, addressing how far the ideal of modern university education, which has gradually been developed in the West since the age of European Enlightenment, was adopted or transformed by Chinese universities.
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  18.  22
    From laboratory to mountaintop: Creating an artificial aurora in the late nineteenth century.Fiona Amery - 2024 - History of Science 62 (4):591-623.
    There existed a tradition of mimetic experimentation in the late nineteenth century, whereby morphologists sought to scale down sublime natural phenomena to tabletop devices in the laboratory. Experimenters constructed analogs of the aurora, attempting to replicate the colors and forms of the phenomenon with discharge tube experiments and electrical displays, which became popular spectacles at London’s public galleries. This paper analyses a closely allied but different kind of imitation. Between 1872 and 1884, Professor Karl Selim Lemström (1838–1904) (...)
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  19.  11
    Changing attitudes: Women in brithish literature from the seventeenth to the late nineteenth century.Amberina Kazi - 2000 - Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities 40 (1&2):11-21.
    The history of women's status in British Society is the "story of a quest" a long seemingly endless one. Women seeking a better, more acknowledged life have suffered, then gone forward, then retreated and so on. Women have sought "--- entry into the world, of education, and of growth, including growth in power ---". In this paper I propose to trace the history of the social status of British women from the seventeenth century to the late nineteenth (...)
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  20.  19
    Profession of Revulsion: Subjective Science and the Mobilization of Emotions in Late Nineteenth-Century Russian Public Medicine.Maria Pirogovskaya - 2024 - Isis 115 (1):105-125.
    This essay explores the rhetoric used by Russian zemstvo physicians, scholars of medicine, and sanitary inspectors to share their expertise with regard to health problems in the last three decades of the nineteenth century. Borrowing the conceptual framework of emotional practices introduced by Monique Scheer, it interprets an appeal to revulsion and sensorial evidence, employed as “templates of language and gesture,” that medical practitioners produced both to mobilize the emotions of their audience and to support their own professional (...)
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  21.  15
    Copyright and Social Movements in Late Nineteenth-Century America.Steven Wilf - 2011 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 12 (1):123-160.
    The cultural turn in copyright law identified authorship as a rhetorical construct employed by economic interests to strengthen claims to property rights. Grassroots intellectual property political movements have been seen as both a means of countering these interests’ everexpanding proprietary control of knowledge and establishing a more public regarding copyright system. This Article examines one of the most notable intellectual property political movements, the emergence of late nineteenth-century agitation to provide copyright protection for foreign authors as a (...)
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  22.  65
    'It's a Long Way From "Amphioxus"' Anton Dohrn and Late Nineteenth Century Debates About Vertebrate Origins.Jane Maienschein - 1994 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 16 (3):465 - 478.
    Anton Dohrn rejected the popular Amphioxus-ascidian theory of vertebrate origin, which saw Amphioxus as the most primitive vertebrate and ascidians as vertebrate ancestors. Instead he argued for the segmented annelids as the more likely candidate. Attacked for being 'unscientific' by such popular morphologists as Carl Gegenbaur and Ernst Haeckel, Dohrn countered with similar accusations. Since the debate peaked as Dohrn was establishing his Stazione Zoologica in Naples at the end of the nineteenth century, it gained him valuable attention (...)
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  23.  34
    Dedicated spirits: religious mediators and romantic ideas in the late nineteenth century.Amy Kittelstrom - 2004 - The European Legacy 9 (1):31-42.
    This article reconstructs a transatlantic community of discourse that used Romantic ideas to mediate between science and religion in order to create a framework for modern belief. The pragmatist William James, Scottish freelance intellectual Thomas Davidson, and ethical culturalist William Mackintire Salter in the United States, and the psychic researcher Frederic Myers and self‐published philosopher Shadworth Hollway Hodgson in England inherited a supreme concept of immanence from Romanticism, which they brought to their fight against dogmatism in religion and materialism in (...)
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  24.  27
    Makers of Modern Indian Religion in the Late Nineteenth Century.Torkel Brekke - 2002 - Oxford University Press.
    This is a book about religious transformation in South Asia in the nineteenth century, perhaps the most important period of religious change in the history of the region. By looking at some outstanding individuals from different religions the book sheds light on the questions that lie at the heart of later nationalist discourse, questions like: Who is a Hindu? Who is a Buddhist? What is the relationship between the religious communities of South Asia?
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  25. Black Bodies, White Bodies: Toward an Iconography of Female Sexuality in Late Nineteenth-Century Art, Medicine, and Literature.Sander L. Gilman - 1985 - Critical Inquiry 12 (1):204-242.
    This essay is an attempt to plumb the conventions which exist at a specific historical moment in both the aesthetic and scientific spheres. I will assume the existence of a web of conventions within the world of the aesthetic—conventions which have elsewhere been admirably illustrated—but will depart from the norm by examining the synchronic existence of another series of conventions, those of medicine. I do not mean in any way to accord special status to medical conventions. Indeed, the world is (...)
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  26.  46
    The transmission of two new scientific disciplines from Europe to North America in the late nineteenth century.R. G. A. Dolby - 1977 - Annals of Science 34 (3):287-310.
    The new disciplines of experimental psychology and physical chemistry which emerged in late-nineteenth-century Germany were transmitted rapidly to North America, where they flourished. At the time, American higher education was growing fast and undergoing important organizational changes. It was then especially receptive to such European ideas as these new growth points in German science. However, although there were important similarities in the transmission of the two sciences, experimental psychology was changed far more than physical chemistry by the (...)
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  27. Surgery and national identity in late nineteenth-century Vienna.Tatjana Buklijas - 2005 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 38 (4):756-774.
    For historians of medicine, the professor Theodor Billroth of the University of Vienna was the leading European surgeon of the late nineteenth century and the personification of intervention by organ or body part removal. For social and political historians, he was a German nationalist whose book on medical education heralded the rise of anti-Semitism in the Austrian public sphere. This article brings together and critically reassesses these two hitherto separate accounts to show how, in a period of (...)
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  28.  2
    Who was the main thinker of the late nineteenth century in Russia? Count Leo Tolstoy vs Vladimir Solovyov.Andrew Schumann - forthcoming - Studies in East European Thought:1-38.
    At the end of the nineteenth century, Leo Tolstoy and Vladimir Solovyov presented two diametrically opposed modes of thinking and reasoning. The question of which of these two figures emerged as the greatest thinker of the time remains an existential one, with significant ontological, epistemological, and metaphysical implications. This opposition is evident in their differing attitudes towards key topics such as political reality, violence, and morality. While Tolstoy’s philosophical contributions are often underestimated and Solovyov is generally regarded as (...)
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  29.  13
    Could the army make soldiers virile? Some reflections on the “military-virile model” in late nineteenth-century France.Mathieu Marly - 2018 - Clio 47:229-247.
    À la fin du xixe siècle, l’armée française se présente comme la grande école censée transmettre aux conscrits les valeurs du « modèle militaro-viril ». Mais les soldats ont-ils toujours retenu cette « leçon de virilité »? Poser la question revient à s’interroger sur les réceptions différenciées de ce modèle en s’inspirant de quelques principes méthodologiques posés par les gender studies. Car avant d’être une représentation valorisée de masculinité, le modèle militaro-viril est une catégorie de genre dont l’usage s’inscrit dans (...)
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  30.  26
    American morphology in the late nineteenth century: The biology department at Johns Hopkins University.Keith R. Benson - 1985 - Journal of the History of Biology 18 (2):163-205.
  31.  15
    Music, Criticism, and the Challenge of History: Shaping Modern Musical Thought in Late Nineteenth Century Vienna.Kevin Karnes - 2008 - Oup Usa.
    More than a century after Guido Adler's appointment to the first chair in musicology at the University of Vienna, Music, Criticism, and the Challenge of History provides a first look at the discipline in this earliest period, and at the ideological dilemmas and methodological anxieties that characterized it upon its institutionalization. Author Kevin Karnes contends that some of the most vital questions surrounding musicology's disciplinary identities today-the relationship between musicology and criticism, the role of the subject in analysis and (...)
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  32.  21
    Physiology and philhellenism in the late nineteenth century: The self-fashioning of Emil du Bois-Reymond.Lea Beiermann & Elisabeth Wesseling - 2020 - Science in Context 33 (1):19-35.
    ArgumentNineteenth-century Prussia was deeply entrenched in philhellenism, which affected the ideological framework of its public institutions. At Berlin’s Friedrich Wilhelm University, philhellenism provided the rationale for a persistent elevation of the humanities over the burgeoning experimental life sciences. Despite this outspoken hierarchy, professor of physiology Emil du Bois-Reymond eventually managed to increase the prestige of his discipline considerably. We argue that du Bois-Reymond’s use of philhellenic repertoires in his expositions on physiology for the educated German public contributed to the (...)
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  33.  34
    The Jesuit contribution to science and technical education in late-nineteenth-century Liverpool.Maurice Whitehead - 1986 - Annals of Science 43 (4):353-368.
    SummaryOn its foundation in 1842, St Francis Xavier's College, Liverpool, was the first British manifestation of the renaissance of Jesuit day-schools throughout nineteenth-century Europe. Initially, the College developed along traditional Jesuit lines, imbibing the spirit of the Ratio Studiorum, the centuries-old educational code of the Society of Jesus.By 1875, a new era had hawned as the needs of one of the largest commercial and industrial centres in the British Empire forced the Jesuits to examine critically the type of (...)
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  34.  62
    The brain under the knife: serial sectioning and the development of late nineteenth-century neuroanatomy.Heini Hakosalo - 2006 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 37 (2):172-202.
    Major changes took place during the last quarter of the nineteenth century in the ways that the brain tissue was maintained, manipulated and studied, and, consequently, in the ways that its structure, functions and pathologies were seen and represented in neurological literature. The paper exemplifies these changes by comparing German neuroanatomy in the 1860s and early 1870s with the turn-of-the-century view of the brain . It argues for the crucial importance of a method—serial sectioning—to the emergence of (...)
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  35.  23
    (1 other version)Female immigration and ethnic identity: German women in Valparaiso. Late nineteenth century and early twentieth century.Baldomero Estrada Turra - 2014 - Alpha (Osorno) 39:23-36.
    El trabajo analiza la participación de la mujer en el proceso migratorio desde mediados del siglo XIX hasta los inicios del siglo XX mediante la colectividad alemana establecida en Valparaíso. Nos detenemos específicamente en la actividad social, el quehacer laboral y la vida familiar de la comunidad germana, con lo que podremos acceder a un ámbito poco conocido del accionar femenino en la empresa migratoria europea, en donde se desarrollan valores y costumbres que constituyen parte importante de la identidad alemana. (...)
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  36.  10
    Herbert Spencer and the limits of the state: the late nineteenth-century debate between individualism and collectivism.Michael Taylor (ed.) - 1996 - Dulles, Va.: Thoemmes Press.
    Contains a representative sample of writings by the Individualists and their critics, and also by some leading Victorian politicians who attempted to translate political theories into practical politics. The debates between these thinkers raise some fundamental issues about the nature of liberty and the role and limits of the State which remain with us still. Many present-day concerns, including the issues at stake between liberals and communitarians, are to be found prefigured in the pages of this collection.
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  37.  20
    Franz Kuhnert and the Phonetics of Late Nineteenth-Century Nankingese.W. South Coblin - 2008 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 128 (1):131.
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  38.  18
    The British Nationalization of Labour Society and the Place of Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward in Late Nineteenth-Century Socialism and Radicalism.K. Manton - 2004 - History of Political Thought 25 (2):325-348.
    This article discusses the British Nationalization of Labour Society , a group formed in response to the political ideas brought forth by Edward Bellamy’s novel Looking Backward. The article traces the roots of this group in British radicalism in general, and in campaigns for land nationalization and the works of Henry George in particular. The NLS were grounded in a deeply materialist and rationalist worldview and the influence of this on their political ideas and practice is shown. Relationships between the (...)
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  39. Grove Karl Gilbert and the concept of “hypothesis” in late nineteenth-century geology.David B. Kitts - 1973 - In Ronald N. Giere & Richard S. Westfall (eds.), Foundations of Scientific Method: The Nineteenth Century. Edited by Ronald N. Giere and Richard S. Westfall. --. Bloomington,: Indiana University Press. pp. 259--274.
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  40.  26
    Science, Society, and Ideology in France: II. The CrowdDistorting Mirrors: Visions of the Crowd in Late Nineteenth-Century FranceSusanna BarrowsL'age des foules: Un traite historique de psychologie des massesSerge Moscovici.Robert A. Nye - 1983 - Isis 74 (4):568-573.
  41. Weber, Wöhler, and Waitz: Virtue Language in Late Nineteenth-Century Physics, Chemistry, and History.Herman Paul - 2017 - In Herman Paul & Jeroen van Dongen (eds.), Epistemic Virtues in the Sciences and the Humanities. Springer Verlag.
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  42. Trauma in Court: Medico-Legal Dialectics in the Late Nineteenth-Century German Discourse on Nervous Injuries.José Brunner - 2003 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 4 (2).
    This paper discusses a dialectic whereby the law not only influenced medical thinking in late nineteenth-century Germany, but also underwent medicalization of its own initiative. At the end of the 1880s, social legislation was crucial in initiating the German discourse on traumatic nervous disorders. By employing doctors as medical experts in court, the law also created a new experiential realm for doctors, altering their behavior toward patients and shifting their focus from therapy to investigation. However, in the (...)
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  43.  3
    : The Bureaucracy of Empathy: Law, Vivisection, and Animal Pain in Late Nineteenth-Century Britain.Jeff Schauer - 2024 - Isis 115 (4):883-884.
  44. Schopenhauer according to the Symbolists: the philosophical roots of late nineteenth-century French aesthetic theory.Shehira Doss-Davezac - 1996 - In Dale Jacquette (ed.), Schopenhauer, Philosophy and the Arts. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 249--76.
     
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  45.  42
    Steam power and the progress of industry in the late nineteenth century.David B. Sicilia - 1986 - Theory and Society 15 (1-2):287-299.
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  46.  20
    William Keith Brooks and the naturalist’s defense of Darwinism in the late-nineteenth century.Richard Nash - 2015 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 37 (2):158-179.
    William Keith Brooks was an American zoologist at Johns Hopkins University from 1876 until his death in 1908. Over the course of his career, Brooks staunchly defended Darwinism, arguing for the centrality of natural selection in evolutionary theory at a time when alternative theories, such as neo-Lamarckism, grew prominent in American biology. In his book The Law of Heredity, Brooks addressed problems raised by Darwin’s theory of pangenesis. In modifying and developing Darwin’s pangenesis, Brooks proposed a new theory of heredity (...)
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  47.  10
    Unions, Courts, and Parties: Judicial Repression and Labor Politics in Late Nineteenth-Century America.Robin Archer - 1998 - Politics and Society 26 (3):391-422.
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  48.  60
    "Giving Body" to Embryos: Modeling, Mechanism, and the Microtome in Late Nineteenth-Century Anatomy.Nick Hopwood - 1999 - Isis 90 (3):462-496.
  49.  6
    Saint-Georges de Bouhélier's Naturisme: An Anti-symbolist Movement in Late Nineteenth-century French Poetry.Patrick L. Day - 2001 - Peter Lang Incorporated, International Academic Publishers.
    At the end of the nineteenth century in France, there arose a literary movement, termed le naturisme by its founder, Saint-Georges de Bouhélier. Anti-symbolist in its conception, le naturisme contained as its tenets a return to clarity and simplicity of expression and a strict avoidance of symbolist hermeticism, characteristic of Mallarmé and others. Bouhélier and his disciples triggered a polemic that raged throughout the final years of the nineteenth century and involved writers such as Emile Zola (...)
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  50. Nature, hyperbole, and the colonial state: Some muslim appropriations of european modernity in late nineteenth-century urdu literature.Javed Majeed - 2000 - In Ronald L. Nettler, Mohamed Mahmoud & John Cooper (eds.), Islam and modernity: Muslim intellectuals respond. London: I. B. Tauris.
     
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