What-if history of science
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Evans, R. 2014. ‘What If’ is a waste of time. The Guardian, March 13, 2014. http://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/mar/13/counterfactual-history-what-if-waste-of-time .
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Love, A.C. 2007. Morphological and paleontological perspectives for a history of evo-devo. In From embryology to evo-devo: A history of developmental evolution, ed. M. Laubichler, and J. Maienschein, 267–307. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Love, A.C. 2009. Marine invertebrates, model organisms, and the modern synthesis: epistemic values, evo-devo, and exclusion. Theory in Biosciences 128: 19–42.
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Moore, J.A. 1979. The post-Darwinian controversies: A study of the Protestant struggle to come to terms with Darwin in Great Britain and America, 1870–1900. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Moore, J.A. 1985. Herbert Spencer’s henchmen: The evolution of Protestant liberals in late nineteenth-century America. In Darwinism and divinity: Essays on evolution and religious belief, ed. J.R. Durant, 76–100. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
Nolan, D. 2013. Why historians (and everyone else) should care about counterfactuals. Philosophical Studies 163: 317–335.
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Richards, R. 1987. Darwin and the emergence of evolutionary theories of mind and behavior. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
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Secord, J. 2000. Victorian sensation: The extraordinary publication, reception and secret authorship of vestiges of the natural history of creation. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Sedgwick, A. 1845. Vestiges of the natural history of creation, London: 1845. Edinburgh Review 82: 1–85.
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van Wyhe, J. 2007. Mind the gap: Did Darwin avoid publishing his theory? Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 60: 177–205.
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