nr |
titel |
auteur |
tijdschrift |
jaar |
jaarg. |
afl. |
pagina('s) |
type |
1 |
A concrete example of representational licensing: The Mississippi River Basin Model
|
Boesch, Brandon |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 36-44 |
artikel |
2 |
An African ethical perspective on South Africa's regulatory frameworks governing animals in research
|
Coetser, Yolandi M. |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 119-128 |
artikel |
3 |
A transformation of Bayesian statistics:Computation, prediction, and rationality
|
Lenhard, Johannes |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 144-151 |
artikel |
4 |
Bottoms up: The Standard Model Effective Field Theory from a model perspective
|
Bechtle, Philip |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 129-143 |
artikel |
5 |
Editorial Board
|
|
|
|
92 |
C |
p. ii |
artikel |
6 |
Eugenics and photography in Britain, the USA and Australia 1870–1940
|
Maxwell, Anne |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 71-85 |
artikel |
7 |
From planning to entrepreneurship: On the political economy of scientific pursuit
|
Baker, Erik |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 27-35 |
artikel |
8 |
Hamilton's rule: A non-causal explanation?
|
Koliofotis, Vaios |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 109-118 |
artikel |
9 |
How blood met plastics, plant and animal extracts: Material encounters between medicine and industry in the twentieth century
|
Prinz, Benjamin |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 45-55 |
artikel |
10 |
Humboldt, Darwin, and romantic resonance in science
|
Liu, Xuansong |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 196-208 |
artikel |
11 |
Isolated systems and their symmetries, part I: General framework and particle-mechanics examples
|
Wallace, David |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 239-248 |
artikel |
12 |
Isolated systems and their symmetries, part II: Local and global symmetries of field theories
|
Wallace, David |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 249-259 |
artikel |
13 |
Kant's theory of scientific hypotheses in its historical context
|
Demarest, Boris |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 12-19 |
artikel |
14 |
Kristine Bonnevie's theories on the genetics of fingerprints, and their application in Germany
|
Teicher, Amir |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 162-176 |
artikel |
15 |
Marinus of Alexandria: Galen's anatomical forefather, or: How do you solve a problem like Marinus?
|
Osen, Elana |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 224-238 |
artikel |
16 |
No one solution to the “new demarcation problem”?: A view from the trenches
|
Wagner, Wendy E. |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 177-185 |
artikel |
17 |
[No title]
|
Krakauer, John W. |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 267-269 |
artikel |
18 |
[No title]
|
Rupert, Robert D. |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 260-263 |
artikel |
19 |
[No title]
|
Camp, Elisabeth |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 264-266 |
artikel |
20 |
[No title]
|
Shea, Nicholas |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 270-273 |
artikel |
21 |
Quantisation as a method of generation: The nature and prospects of theory changes through quantisation
|
Linnemann, Niels |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 209-223 |
artikel |
22 |
Red herrings about relative measures: A response to Hoefer and Krauss
|
Stegenga, Jacob |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 56-59 |
artikel |
23 |
Selection, presentism, and pluralist history
|
Barseghyan, Hakob |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 60-70 |
artikel |
24 |
Sins of inquiry: How to criticize scientific pursuits
|
DiMarco, Marina |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 86-96 |
artikel |
25 |
‘Thrown into the fossil gap’: Indigenous Australian ancestral bodily remains in the hands of early Darwinian anatomists, c. 1860–1916
|
Turnbull, Paul |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 1-11 |
artikel |
26 |
Towards noncommutative quantum reality
|
Kong, Otto C.W. |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 186-195 |
artikel |
27 |
Whatever happened to reversion?
|
Pence, Charles H. |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 97-108 |
artikel |
28 |
When do non-epistemic values play an epistemically illegitimate role in science? How to solve one half of the new demarcation problem
|
Reutlinger, Alexander |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 152-161 |
artikel |
29 |
Why citizen review might beat peer review at identifying pursuitworthy scientific research
|
Santana, Carlos |
|
|
92 |
C |
p. 20-26 |
artikel |