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The Return of Realism in the Logos Approach to Quantum Mechanics (Reply to Arroyo and Arenhart) Foundations of Science (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-02-11 Christian de Ronde
In a recent paper (Arroyo and Arenhart in Found Sci 28:885–910, 2013) Arroyo and Arenhart presented a detailed critical analysis regarding some essential aspects of representational realism and the logos approach to Quantum Mechanics (QM) addressed in terms of (i) “a diagnosis of what is wrong with currently available solutions”; (ii) “a proposal of a new methodology for addressing the problem”; and
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The extraterrestrial hypothesis: an epistemological case for removing the taboo European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.5) Pub Date : 2025-02-08 William C. Lane
The extraterrestrial hypothesis (ETH), the hypothesis that an extraterrestrial civilization (ETC) is active on Earth today, is taboo in academia, but the assumptions behind this taboo are faulty. Advances in biology have rendered the notion that complex life is rare in our Galaxy improbable. The objection that no ETC would come to Earth to hide from us does not consider all possible alien motives or
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Wigner and Friends, A Map is not the Territory! Contextuality in Multi-agent Paradoxes Foundations of Science (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-01-30 Sidiney B. Montanhano
Multi-agent scenarios, like Wigner’s friend and Frauchiger–Renner scenarios, can show contradictory results when a non-classical formalism must deal with the knowledge between agents. Such paradoxes are described with multi-modal logic as violations of the structure in classical logic. Even if knowledge is treated in a relational way with the concept of trust, contradictory results can still be found
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Nagelian reduction and approximation European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.5) Pub Date : 2025-01-30 Bohang Chen
Critics frequently target Ernest Nagel’s model of reduction for its purported inadequacy in addressing the issue of approximation. In response, proponents of Nagel’s model have integrated approximations into the more comprehensive Generalized Nagel-Schaffner model, or the GNS model. However, this article contends that the pertinent criticisms and responses are both misplaced: There are no barriers
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On the Neo-Empiricist Thesis and Historicity of Science: Enriques and Neurath Foundations of Science (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-01-13 Mirella Fortino
In this article, which testifies the European dimension of Federigo Enriques, an essential question is raised: is it conceivable to admit a radical antithesis between logical empiricism or neo-empiricism and the Enriquesian view of scientific thought? This paper therefore analyses the relationship between Enriques’ conception of science and that of Otto Neurath, one of the main representatives of neo-empiricism
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Curiosity, Awe and Wonder: The Emotions that Open Our Mind Foundations of Science (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-01-14 Francis Heylighen
This paper explores how the epistemic emotions of curiosity, awe, and wonder can motivate us to expand our understanding. Curiosity drives us to fill a local gap in our knowledge. Awe is a mixture of fear and fascination for something so vast and mysterious that it challenges our understanding, thus inciting cognitive accommodation. Wonder is intermediate between curiosity and awe. Awe is commonly
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The replication crisis is less of a “crisis” in Lakatos’ philosophy of science than it is in Popper’s European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.5) Pub Date : 2025-01-09 Mark Rubin
Popper’s (1983, 2002) philosophy of science has enjoyed something of a renaissance in the wake of the replication crisis, offering a philosophical basis for the ensuing science reform movement. However, adherence to Popper’s approach may also be at least partly responsible for the sense of “crisis” that has developed following multiple unexpected replication failures. In this article, I contrast Popper’s
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A Bayesian Analysis of the Hubble Tension Foundations of Science (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2024-12-27 Vincenzo Fano, Marco Sanchioni
This paper conducts a Bayesian analysis of the Hubble tension, which addresses the discrepancy between local measurements of the Hubble Constant \(H_0\) and the value predicted by the \(\Lambda \)CDM model based on Cosmic Microwave Background data. By incorporating new, independent data from the James Webb Space Telescope released in August 2024, the analysis shows that, unlike before, there is no
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Stopping rule and Bayesian confirmation theory European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-28 Yunbing Li, Yongfeng Yuan
This article mainly investigates whether common Bayesian confirmation measures are affected by stopping rules. The results indicate that difference measure d, log-ratio measure r, and log-likelihood measure l are not affected by non-informative stopping rules, but affected by informative stopping rules. In contrast, Carnap measure \(\tau \), normalized difference measure n, and Mortimer measure m are
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Preparation and Test in Physics Foundations of Science (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2024-12-26 Shengyang Zhong
To model a (particular kind of) physical system, the perspective that encompasses preparations, tests and the interplay between them is crucial. In this paper, we employ the conceptual and technical framework presented by Buffernoir (2023) to model physical systems through this pivotal lens, utilizing Chu spaces. With some intuitive and operational axioms we manage to reproduce the following fundamental
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Maxwell’s Masterful Entanglement of Optics and Electromagnetism: Bottomed Questioning the Incommensurability Tenet Foundations of Science (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2024-12-23 Rinat M. Nugayev
It is contended that one of the promising directions for brooding over the problem of incommensurability of paradigms, coined by T. Kuhn and P. Feyerabend, may be associated with the trend of neo-Kantian epistemology, embodied by the writings of Ernst Cassirer. According to Cassirer, the statements fixing connections and relationships between mathematical ideal constructs render a reliable ‘neutral
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Albert the Great on Climatic Determinism Early Science and Medicine (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-20 Vlad-Lucian Ile
The concept of ‘climate’ has evolved from its original meaning as an astronomical and geographical reality to a contemporary vision in which it appears as an entity that can be changed and affected by human beings. Long before arriving at the current state of affairs, the thirteenth-century notion of clima was closely related to the influence exerted by the heavens and the supra-terrestrial realm on
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Albrecht Dürer’s Drawing Devices: an Experimental Study Early Science and Medicine (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-20 Philip Steadman
In the two editions of his Underweysung der Messung of 1525 and 1538, Albrecht Dürer published designs for four devices to help artists with drawing. The present author has reconstructed all four tools and made experiments, in each case drawing a lute. The paper reports on the problems encountered and the times taken. For comparison, a perspective view of the lute is constructed geometrically, and
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Climata et temperamenta: the Influence of Climate and Environment on Human Complexion in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries Early Science and Medicine (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-20 Evelina Miteva
The present paper addresses the way in which local conditions – geographical, biological or astrological – were believed to influence the general constitution of human nature from the viewpoint of natural philosophy. What were the material conditions that constituted the diversity between peoples and individuals? The focus of this paper is on the relation between climatic zones and the complexion of
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Climate after the Middle Ages: a Look at Later Developments Early Science and Medicine (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-20 Sara Miglietti
In this article, I explore the influence of medieval “climate theories” upon later thinkers, highlighting three thematic areas where this continuity was particularly strong: the problem of method; the management of disagreement; and the question of freedom. In each of these areas, Renaissance theorists built upon the work of their Scholastic predecessors (primarily Albert the Great and Roger Bacon)
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Ibn Bājja on Climates Early Science and Medicine (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-20 Corrado la Martire
Extant information about Ibn Bājja’s interest in climatology is limited to a few vague anecdotes. This article seeks to expand our understanding of his views on the inhabitable and uninhabitable regions of the earth, drawing primarily on his commentaries on Aristotle’s Meteorology (al-?thār al-?ulwiyya) and Generation and Corruption (al-Kawn wa-l-fasād). The article presents an attempt to explain why
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“Northerners are Strong, Southerners are Timid”: the Notion of Climate in Medieval Physiognomy Early Science and Medicine (IF 0.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-20 Lisa Devriese
This article examines the role that climate played in medieval physiognomy, and more specifically in the medieval commentaries on the pseudo-Aristotelian Physiognomonica. As the Physiognomonica is mainly a listing of external bodily features and of their corresponding character traits without explaining how precisely these connections come about, certain medieval commentators attempted to fill this
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Evolution of the Ethos of Science: From the Representationalist to the Interventionist Approach to Science Foundations of Science (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2024-12-18 Marek Sikora
The article is an exploration into the problem of the ethos of modern science viewed from the representationalist and interventionist perspectives. The representationalist account of science is associated with the position of theoreticism, while the interventionist account pertains to the concept of new experimentalism. The former of these approaches is dominated by the ethos of science which Robert
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Another philosophical look at twistor theory European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-18 Gregor Gajic, Nikesh Lilani, James Read
Despite its being one of Roger Penrose’s greatest contributions to spacetime physics, there is a dearth of philosophical literature on twistor theory. The one exception to this is Bain (2006)—but although excellent, there remains much to be said on the foundations and philosophy of twistor theory. In this article, we (a) present for philosophers an introduction to twistor theory, (b) consider how the
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What you can do for evolutionary developmental linguistics European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-16 William C. Bausman, Marcel Weber
A growing number of linguistic attempts to explain how languages change use cultural-evolutionary models involving selection or drift. Developmental constraints and biases, which take center stage in evolutionary developmental biology or evo-devo, seem to be absent within this framework, even though linguistics is home to numerous notions of constraint. In this paper, we show how these evo-devo concepts
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The Logic of Potential Infinity Philosophia Mathematica (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2024-12-15 Roy T Cook
Michael Dummett argues that acceptance of potentially infinite collections requires that we abandon classical logic and restrict ourselves to intuitionistic logic. In this paper we examine whether Dummett is correct. After developing two detailed accounts of what, exactly, it means for a concept to be potentially infinite (based on ideas due to Charles McCarty and ?ystein Linnebo, respectively), we
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Robert Woodhouse Crompton 1926–2022 Historical Records of Australian Science (IF 0.2) Pub Date : 2024-12-09 Erich Weigold, Zoran Lj. Petrovic, Stephen J. Buckman
Robert (Bob) Crompton was a towering figure in low energy electron and ion physics in Australia and internationally, as witnessed by his seminal publications on swarm physics, atomic and molecular physics and gaseous electronics generally, his widely-read monograph with Sir Leonard Huxley on the subject of charged-particle transport, and the many personal and professional accolades and awards he received
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Robert Kirk: blood, genetics, race and rights in the twentieth century Historical Records of Australian Science (IF 0.2) Pub Date : 2024-12-05 Michelle Bootcov
Warning: This article discusses blood collecting in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. It also contains the image of an unnamed Aboriginal man who may be deceased. It is not without justification that the collecting of blood for genetic analysis is frequently associated with race science, but it is not solely or inevitably so. This history of Robert Kirk, a British–Australian population
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Between theory and experiment: model use in dark matter detection European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-05 Rami Jreige
There is a complex interplay between the models in dark matter detection experiments that have led to a difficulty in interpreting the results of the experiments and ascertain whether we have detected the particle or not. The aim of this paper is to categorise and explore the different models used in said experiments, by emphasizing the distinctions and dependencies among different types of models
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Guiding principles in physics European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-05 Enno Fischer
Guiding principles are central to theory development in physics, especially when there is only limited empirical input available. Here I propose an approach to such principles looking at their heuristic role. I suggest a distinction between two modes of employing scientific principles. Principles of nature make descriptive claims about objects of inquiry, and principles of epistemic action give directives
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Mapping the philosophy and neuroscience nexus through citation analysis European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-04 Eugenio Petrovich, Marco Viola
We provide a quantitative analysis of the philosophy-neuroscience nexus using citation analysis. Combining bibliometric indicators of cross-field visibility with journal citation mapping techniques, we investigate four dimensions of the nexus: how the visibility of neuroscience in philosophy and of philosophy in neuroscience has changed over time, which areas of philosophy are more interested in neuroscience
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Emerging into the rainforest: Emergence and special science ontology European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-04 Alexander Franklin, Katie Robertson
Scientific realists don’t standardly discriminate between, say, biology and fundamental physics when deciding whether the evidence and explanatory power warrant the inclusion of new entities in our ontology. As such, scientific realists are committed to a lush rainforest of special science kinds (Ross, 2000). Viruses certainly inhabit this rainforest – their explanatory power is overwhelming – but
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Recovering particle properties in revisionary ontologies European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-04 Sabrina Hao
In this paper, I explore the relation between actual scientific practice and conceptual interpretation of scientific theories by investigating the particle concept in non-relativistic quantum mechanics (NRQM). On the one hand, philosophers have raised various objections against the particle concept within the context of NRQM and proposed alternative ontologies such as wave function realism, Bohmian
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The quantum gravity seeds for laws of nature European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-04 Vincent Lam, Daniele Oriti
We discuss the challenges that the standard (Humean and non-Humean) accounts of laws face within the framework of quantum gravity where space and time may not be fundamental. This paper identifies core (meta)physical features that cut across a number of quantum gravity approaches and formalisms and that provide seeds for articulating updated conceptions that could account for QG laws not involving
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Governing the private scales of families and homes: Visiting nurses and Turkey's mobilization of consumptive care Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-29 Kyle T. Evered, Emine ?. Evered
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the visiting nurses of western empires and nation-states performed vital labor in combating tuberculosis (TB). Their hybrid role combined modern nursing and social work, typically benefitting from civil society organizations. In late Ottoman and early republican Turkey, tuberculosis resulted in many fatalities. To overcome this biopolitical challenge
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Our Island Stories: Country Walks Through Colonial Britain, Corinne Fowler. Allen Lane, London (2024), 432 pages, ?25.00 hardback Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-29 Alan Lester
This review article sets Corinne Fowler's new book in the context of the political struggle over Britain's colonial past, often referred to as a ‘culture war’. It identifies this struggle specifically as a right wing backlash against Black Lives Matter, notes how Fowler has been targeted by its protagonists, and examines how she has responded with this a book intended to inform, ameliorate and encourage
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Mapping Europe in war and peace, 1915–1919: B. C. Wallis and the 1919 Peoples of Austria-Hungary geographical handbook and atlas Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-27 Róbert Gy?ri, Charles W.J. Withers
The paper examines The Peoples of Austria-Hungary geographical handbook and the accompanying Atlas of Austria-Hungary, published by Britain's Naval Intelligence Division in 1919 and, in greater detail, the antecedent mapping and statistical studies of Bertie Cotterell Wallis, a London schoolteacher, who undertook to study Hungary's nationalities and demography from 1915 as part of the 1:1?M mapping
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Construcción de un espacio marítimo, El Pacífico y su evolución a partir de sus redes transoceánicas e interamericanas, 1521-1821, Guadalupe Pinzón Ríos and Raquel E. Güereca Durán (Eds). Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico D.F. (2023), 241 pages, MNX $ 400 paperback, ebook Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-26 Jorge Ortiz-Sotelo
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Vigilant trust in scientific expertise European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-21 Hanna Metzen
This paper investigates the value of trust and the proper attitude lay people ought to have towards scientific experts. Trust in expertise is usually considered to be valuable, while distrust is often analyzed in cases where it is harmful. I will draw on accounts from political philosophy and argue that it is not only public trust that is valuable when it comes to scientific expertise – but also public
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The epistemological significance of exploratory experimentation: A pragmatist model of how practices matter philosophically European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-21 Pierre-Hugues Beauchemin, Kent W. Staley
We employ a pragmatic model of inquiry to distinguish the epistemological character of exploratory experimentation. Exploratory experimentation is not constituted by any intrinsic characteristics of an episode of experimentation but depends on the context and aims of the experiment and the ways in which these shape decisions about how the experimental inquiry is to be conducted: its tasks, resources
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Gender diversity in Australian astronomy: the Astronomical Society of Australia 1966–2023 Historical Records of Australian Science (IF 0.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-18 Toner Stevenson, Nick Lomb
In this paper we examine the changes in the diversity of astronomers working in Australia, particularly the ratio of women compared to men, from 1966, when the Astronomical Society of Australia (ASA) was formed, to 2023. This was a pivotal time, as there was a significant change to workplace law that enabled women who worked for Commonwealth departments to retain their permanent position once they
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The Rising Down. Lives in a Sussex Landscape, Alexandra Harris. Faber & Faber, London (2024), 490 pages, ?25 hardcover Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-19 Charles Watkins
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Projecting the world: The mediated geography of the projection lantern in Belgium c.1900-c.1920 Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-19 Margo Buelens-Terryn, Thomas Smits
This article studies the virtual world(s) that Belgian audiences encountered through the multimodal mass medium of the projection lantern in the early twentieth century. In contrast to previous work, we move from studying the visual representation of a single place in a small number of projection slides to examining the virtual world(s) that the lantern medium enabled. To achieve this overview, we
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The SAGE Handbook of Historical Geography, Mona Domosh, Michael Heffernan and Charles W.J. Withers (Eds). SAGE Publications Ltd, London and Thousand Oaks, Ca. (2020), 2 volumes, l + 1066 pages, UK?265.00 and US$451.00 hardback. Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-16 Alan R.H. Baker
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Overcoming the crisis: Social and ecological impacts of the 17th and 18th century Northern Wars on Kazuń village (Poland) and its surrounding area Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-16 Tomasz Zwi?zek, Milena Obremska, Micha? Targowski, ?ukasz Sobechowicz, Wojciech Aleksander Siwek, Micha? G?siorowski, Martin Theuerkauf, Monika Koz?owska-Szyc, Piotr Guzowski, Rados?aw Poniat, Anna Mulczyk, Krzysztof Szewczyk, Tomasz Panecki, Jerzy Solon, Urszula Zachara-Zwi?zek, Micha? S?owiński
The wars that ravaged the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in the 17th century were among the most destructive events in the history of that part of Europe at the time. It is said that from this point on, the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth transitioned from a subject to an object state. Through interdisciplinary research involving the analysis of written, cartographic, and paleoecological data, we aim
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An Ethiopian imperial town: The forgotten historical geographies of ?Amba ?ara Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-15 Agmas Getenet Worknih
This article engages in examining the historical geography of ?Amba ?ara in the modern period of Ethiopia since 1850s. Ethiopian imperial history began in the Aksum era of the first century A.D., when an emperor moved from the country's capital and founded a number of temporary royal towns in order to develop and strengthen his kingdom. ?Amba ?ara was one of these towns. There is a dearth of research
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Roundtable Conference Geographies: Constituting Colonial India in Interwar London, Stephen Legg. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2023), p. 397, ?90.00 hardback Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-15 Shreya Bhattacharya
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Water and the Environmental History of Modern India, Velayutham Saravanan. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, London, (2020), 264 pages, ?23.03 hardback. Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-14 Deepak Malik
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The lordscape: Mapping seigneurial jurisdictions in the late-medieval Low Countries Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-14 Margreet Brandsma, Jim van der Meulen
This article explores the relationship between the spatial distribution of elite power and geophysical factors in two regions within the Low Countries between c.1350 – c.1650. It does so through a focus on seigneuries, bundles of territory and rights through which premodern lords and ladies across Europe held jurisdiction and economic prerogatives over local subjects. Historians have often assumed
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Lucky Valley: A roundtable Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-13 Miles Ogborn, Herman L. Bennett, Kennetta Hammond Perry, Bill Schwarz, Catherine Hall
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Multisensorial hydrography with Venetian depictions from 1880 to 1895 Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-13 Daniel A. Finch-Race
This article, prompted by first-hand experience of considerable controversy over cruise ships in the Venetian Lagoon, seeks to take forward reasoning around archipelagic wateriness. In light of the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals on ‘Clean Water and Sanitation’ and ‘Life below Water’, I shuttle between the twenty-first and nineteenth centuries on an experimental trajectory that brings
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Predicative Classes and Strict Potentialism Philosophia Mathematica (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2024-11-12 ?ystein Linnebo, Stewart Shapiro
While sets are combinatorial collections, defined by their elements, classes are logical collections, defined by their membership conditions. We develop, in a potentialist setting, a predicative approach to (logical) classes of (combinatorial) sets. Some reasons emerge to adopt a stricter form of potentialism, which insists, not only that each object is generated at some stage of an incompletable process
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The mysterious Dr Ferdinand von Sommer (~1800–49): Western Australia’s first government geologist Historical Records of Australian Science (IF 0.2) Pub Date : 2024-11-07 Alexandra Ludewig
Dr Ferdinand von Sommer (~1800–49) was the first government geologist appointed in Western Australia, a state that today owes its prosperity largely to the discovery and development of its rich mineral deposits. During his relatively short life, Ferdinand left a trail of incredible and diverse achievements, exploits and mystery that extended across the continents of Europe, Asia, Africa and Oceania
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The Yellowstone as the longest undammed river in the contiguous United States: An environmental historical geography of a mythic landscape Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-07 Nicolas T. Bergmann
This article contributes to a body of scholarship examining the relationship between myth and geography. Specifically, I integrate a posthumanist understanding of assemblage theory to better account for the role that more-than-human entities play in the creation and transformation of mythic landscapes. To support this line of inquiry, I adopt Bowden's geographical traditions model to help trace the
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Historical geographies of a Damascan population crisis: Jawlān and ?awrān in the late Mamluk - early Ottoman periods Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-06 Abbasi Mustafa, Kate Raphael
This multidisciplinary study examines the potential causes of a severe and rapid population and settlement decline during the period of transition in the Jawlān and eastern ?awrān regions in the province of Damascus. The Jawlān had been part of a relatively small and centralized sultanate in the Mamluk period. However, in the sixteenth century it was incorporated into an empire that ruled over three
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Roger Tory Peterson Down Under: an American’s influence on Australian birding field guides Historical Records of Australian Science (IF 0.2) Pub Date : 2024-10-31 Russell McGregor
The American, Roger Tory Peterson, has been the single most influential figure in the evolution of birding field guides around the world. He was also a major contributor to the awakening of an environmental consciousness among the wider public in the second half of the twentieth century. In Australia, he provided a powerful impetus to the renovation of the field guide genre from the 1960s onward; and
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Contesting monuments: Heritage and historical geographies of inequality, an introduction Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-30 Stephen Legg
This paper introduces a virtual special issue that explores how monuments have been contested in the past and how they continue to be so in the present. A survey of papers published in this journal from the 1990s to the early-2000s demonstrates an ongoing and rich interest in the interconnections between nationalism, landscape and ritual, with some emphasis on resistance but little sense of the contemporary
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Spreading across the continent: the Astronomical Society of Australia 1966–2023 Historical Records of Australian Science (IF 0.2) Pub Date : 2024-10-24 Nick Lomb, Toner Stevenson
Australian astronomy has undergone huge changes since the middle of the twentieth century, when astronomers generally only had access to the observing facilities of their own institution. In this paper, we look at the changes in the context of the membership of the Astronomical Society of Australia (ASA), since its formation in 1966. Initially, the dominant institutions were the Australian National
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Eastern isles, western isles: Geographical imaginaries and trans-island identities in British conceptions of Japan, 1800–1868 Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-28 Annabel Storr
Ideas of islands shaped Britain's self-identity and its relationship with the wider world in the early and mid-nineteenth century. Existing interpretations of Anglo-Japanese relations have emphasized the development of the idea of Japan as the ‘Britain of the East’ in the late nineteenth century with the significance of Japan adopting a western model of development. This article argues for a critical
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Underdetermination in classic and modern tests of general relativity European Journal for Philosophy of Science (IF 1.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-21 William J. Wolf, Marco Sanchioni, James Read
Canonically, ‘classic’ tests of general relativity (GR) include perihelion precession, the bending of light around stars, and gravitational redshift; ‘modern’ tests have to do with, inter alia, relativistic time delay, equivalence principle tests, gravitational lensing, strong field gravity, and gravitational waves. The orthodoxy is that both classic and modern tests of GR afford experimental confirmation
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Map making as memory practice: The historical geography of East European shtetls as expressed in Jewish yizkerbikher Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-19 Marta Kubiszyn
This article argues that the spatial subjectivity of the map maker is a crucial component of historical geography and uses maps in post-Holocaust yizker bikher to demonstrate how these hand-drawn geographies are invaluable counterweights to perpetrator mapping projects. To develop the argument, the article analyzes three selected yizker bikher maps, renderings of towns inhabited by Jewish and non-Jewish
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Juliet B.WiersemaThe History of a Periphery: Spanish Colonial Cartography from Colombia’s Pacific Lowlands2023University of?Texas PressAustin168 pages US$ 60.00 hardback, ebook Journal of Historical Geography (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-19 Ana María Silva Campo