Alexander Wragge-Morley
| Name: | Alexander Wragge-Morley |
| Affiliation: | Department of History and Philosophy of Science |
| E-mail: | (only provided to users who are logged into talks.cam) |
| Last login: | None |
Public lists managed by Alexander Wragge-Morley
Talks given by Alexander Wragge-Morley
Obviously this only lists talks that are listed through talks.cam. Furthermore, this facility only works if the speaker's e-mail was specified in a talk. Most talks have not done this.
- Politeness and the ethical force of natural history
- Representational practices and the ethics of natural history, 1650–1720
- Description, design and aesthesis in the work of John Ray and contemporaries
- 'Restitution' in seventeenth-century architecture and natural philosophy
Talks organised by Alexander Wragge-Morley
This list is based on what was entered into the 'organiser' field in a talk. It may not mean that Alexander Wragge-Morley actually organised the talk, they may have been responsible only for entering the talk into the talks.cam system.
- Edmund Selous: birdwatching and interpreting animal behaviour in Britain, 1900
- Mathematical culture in Elizabethan England
- Title to be confirmed
- White maps of Africa – the making of blank spaces
- Nunataks: historical phytogeography and botanical nation building in 1930s Québec
- A scientific toy for red-blooded boys: the Gilbert chemistry set and non-journalistic popularization of science
- Teacher, toy, or calculator? Reflections of mathematics, education, and society in a 20th-century American object
- The contested banana tree: public debates about science in eighteenth-century Central America
- Special session in the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology 'Assembling Bodies' exhibition
- Authenticating nature: situating photographic trust in the late nineteenth century scientific periodical press
- The theatre of science vs the science of theatre: thinking about 18th century experimental performance
- The meaning of altruism in interwar London
- Mass-Observation's May the Twelfth (1937) as utopian sociology
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