Ohad Parnes
Research Scholar (Since 2014)
PhD, Honorary Associate Professor
Raum 252
Ohad Parnes studied Biology and History of Science at the Tel-Aviv University, obtaining his PhD in 2001 with a dissertation on nineteenth century physiology and medicine. He worked at the Open University in Israel, at the Central European University in Budapest, at the University of Berne and has been a Research Fellow at the Center of Cultural and Literary Research (ZfL) in Berlin and the Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine, University College in London. His main interests are the history of the life sciences and modern medicine, focusing on evolutionary theory and epigenetics as well as the history of immunology and autoimmunity and chronic disease in the twentieth century. Ohad's current research project deals with his doctoral supervisor Yehuda Elkana's estate and the digitalization of Theodor Schwann's estate.
Projekte
Theories of Knowledge in the Twentieth Century: the “Split of Scientific Rationality”
Selected Publications
Renn, Jürgen, Matteo Valleriani, and Ohad Parnes, eds. (2019). “Leonardo’s Intellectual Cosmos.” Spark: Catalysts for Insight, no. 4: 26–33.
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Parnes, Ohad (2002). “[Entries] ‘Schleiden, Matthias Jacob’; ‘Schwann, Theodor Ambrose Hubert’; ‘Richet, Charles’’.’” In Encyclopedia of life sciences. London: Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1038/npg.els.0002474.
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Parnes, Ohad (2001). “Review of: Meinel, Christoph: Instrument - Experiment : historische Studien. Berlin [u.a.]: GNT-Verlag 2000.” The British Journal for the History of Science 34 (122,3): 347–349.
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Parnes, Ohad (2001). “Chipping away at feudal vestiges in Academe.” Science 291 (5501): 23–24.
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Past Events
Institutskolloquium
- Institute Event
Media History and Its Objects
MOREInstitutskolloquium
- Institute Event
Information, Knowledge, and the Copernican Delay
MORELecture
- Institute Event
Living with the Bomb
MOREInstitutskolloquium
- Institute Event
Medieval Computus: Three Arguments for its Significance to Historians of Science
MOREInstitutskolloquium
- Institute Event
Digital History, Quantitative History: Between the Humanities and the Social Sciences
MOREVortrag
- Institute Event
Steps Towards an Ecology of Dis-regard
MOREKonferenz
- Institute Event
Forgetting Knowledge
MOREInstitutskolloquium
- Institute Event
Knowledge and Description
MOREInstitutskolloquium
- Institute Event
Wave Science and its Forms
MOREInstitutskolloquium
- Institute Event
The Worldwide Rise of “No Religion” and Its Significance
MOREInstitutskolloquium
- Institute Event
Popular Medicine in Antiquity
MOREInstitutskolloquium
- Institute Event
Forgotten Paths of Empire: Firestone and the Promise of Liberia
MOREInstitutskolloquium
- Institute Event
The Scientific Journal: A Political History
MOREInstitutskolloquium
- Institute Event
Speech, Slavery and Natural History in the Anglo-Caribbean World
MOREInstitutskolloquium
- Institute Event
Humanists and Time, or: Kepler Wagging his Tail
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