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Jürgen Renn for ARD-alpha-demokratie on opportunities posed by Covid-19 pandemic for climate protection
Go to Video (in German)In Memoriam: Robert K. Englund
Das Max-Planck-Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte trauert um Robert K. Englund
Mai 26, 2020In Memoriam: Robert K. Englund
The Max Planck Institute for the History of Science mourns the loss of Robert K. Englund
Mai 26, 2020Presentation | Jun 15, 2020 | 14:00 bis 15:30
Digital, Domestic, Disposable: The Life Sciences’ Many Cultures of Experimentation
MehrJürgen Renn in der MOZ über Covid-19 und die veränderte Rolle der Wissenschaft in der Gesellschaft
Zum Artikel (auf Deutsch)Jürgen Renn in MOZ on Covid-19 and why we need a new understanding of the role of science in society
Go to Article (in German)The Skeleton as Art and Artifact: the Representation and Making of Skeletons 1500–1750
The human skeleton has multiple meanings in history: medical, scientific, symbolic, religious. These perceptions have shifted over time and place, and
Chinesischsprachiger "History of Science Reader" in Shanghai Review of Books gelobt
Zur Rezension (auf Chinesisch)Chinese-language "History of Science Reader” praised in Shanghai Review of Books
Go to Review (in Chinese)Networks and Knowledge of Glass in the Dutch Republic, 1650–1795
Glass in the early modern period was a boundary object, made, and used by hybrid experts: it was used widely for utensils and optic aids, in architect
Publication, M.M.A. Hendriksen, "Necessary, not sufficient: The circulation of knowledge about stained glass in the northern Netherlands, 1650–1821." Nuncius. Journal of the Material and Visual History of Science. Vol. 31, 2 (2016): 332–360., Personal Website, Marieke Hendriksen Biography