SAMPLE ALL THE FLAVORS!
Increasingly, Vanderbilt instructors are incorporating blogs into their course design. Course Blogs at Vanderbilt is a mash-up of live feeds representing a wide variety of Vanderbilt courses that use blogging to help students reflect on, comment about, and introduce new ideas to course material. Click on the blog title to view the originating course blog. You can also click on the Participating Blogs tab for links to each blog.ADD YOUR COURSE BLOG TO THIS SITE!
Are you administering or participating in a course blog as at Vanderbilt? SEND US THE URL and we'll include it on this site.
Category Archives: Margaret Cavendish
A Louse-y Holiday: Cavendish, Hooke, and the History of Scientific Objectivity
Christmas 2014 will forever be remembered by my family as: The Christmas of the Louse. Yep. Louse or better known by it’s plural form (because there is never just one) Lice. Imagine this: after a weekend filled with the joys of experiencing Christmas… Continue reading
Posted in 17th Century, 18th century, 19th Century, 20th Century, Christmas, experimental philosophy, history of science, Lice, Lice Humor, Louse, Margaret Cavendish, Micrographia, microscopic science, objectivity, Observations upon Experimental Philosophy, Robert Hooke, scientific objectivity
Comments Off on A Louse-y Holiday: Cavendish, Hooke, and the History of Scientific Objectivity