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The Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of Science - The Department ...

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Feminist <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Science</strong><br />

Signs: Journal <strong>of</strong> Women in Culture and Society (1978): 4(1), Special Issue: Women, <strong>Science</strong><br />

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Toward an Anthropology <strong>of</strong> Women, New York: Monthly Review Press, 9–21.<br />

Smith, D. (1977): “Women’s Perspective as a Radical Critique <strong>of</strong> Sociology,” Sociological<br />

Inquiry, 44, 7–13.<br />

Spanier, B. (1995): Im/Partial <strong>Science</strong>: Gender Ideology in Molecular Biology. Blooming<strong>to</strong>n:<br />

Indiana University Press.<br />

Stanley, L. and Wise, S. (1983): Breaking Out: Feminist Consciousness and Feminist<br />

Research. Bos<strong>to</strong>n: Routledge and Kegan Paul.<br />

Star, S. L. (1979): “Sex Differences and <strong>the</strong> Dicho<strong>to</strong>mization <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Brain: Methods, Limits,<br />

and Problems in Research on Consciousness,” in Hubbard and Lowe (1979, pp.<br />

113–30).<br />

Tanner, N. and Zihlman, A. (1976): “Women in Evolution,” Signs, 1, 585–608.<br />

Tobach, E. and Ros<strong>of</strong>f, B. (eds.) (1978): Genes and Gender I: On Hereditarianism and<br />

Women. New York: Gordian Press.<br />

Traweek, S. (1988): Beamtimes and Lifetimes: <strong>The</strong> World <strong>of</strong> High Energy Physics. Cambridge,<br />

MA: Harvard University Press.<br />

Tuana, N. (ed.) (1987): Hypatia, 2(3), Special Issue on Feminism and <strong>Science</strong> I.<br />

Tuana, N. (ed.) (1988): Hypatia, 3(1), Special Issue on Feminism and <strong>Science</strong> II.<br />

Tuana, N. (ed.) (1989): Feminism and <strong>Science</strong>. Blooming<strong>to</strong>n: Indiana University Press.<br />

Tuana, N. (1996): “Revaluing <strong>Science</strong>: Starting from <strong>the</strong> Practicws <strong>of</strong> Women,” in Nelson<br />

and Nelson (1996, pp. 17–38).<br />

Wylie, A. (1995): “Doing <strong>Philosophy</strong> as a Feminist: Longino on <strong>the</strong> Search for a Feminist<br />

Epistemology,” Philosophical Topics, 23(2), 345–58.<br />

Wylie, A. (1996a): “Feminism and Social <strong>Science</strong>,” in E. Craig (ed.), Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Philosophy</strong>, New York and London: Routledge, 191–4.<br />

Wylie, A. (1996b): “<strong>The</strong> Constitution <strong>of</strong> Archaeological Evidence: Gender Politics and<br />

<strong>Science</strong>,” in P. Galison and D. J. Stump (eds.), <strong>The</strong> Disunity <strong>of</strong> <strong>Science</strong>. Stanford:<br />

Stanford University Press, 311–43.<br />

Wylie, A. (1997a): “Good <strong>Science</strong>, Bad <strong>Science</strong>, or <strong>Science</strong> as Usual? Feminist Critiques <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Science</strong>,” in L. D. Hager (ed.), Women in Human Evolution. New York: Routledge,<br />

29–55.<br />

Wylie, A. (1997b): “<strong>The</strong> Engendering <strong>of</strong> Archaeology: Refiguring Feminist <strong>Science</strong><br />

Studies,” Osiris, 12, 80–99.<br />

Wylie, A. (2000): “Feminism in <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Science</strong>: Making Sense <strong>of</strong> Contingency<br />

and Constraint,” in J. Hornsby and M. Fricker (eds.), Companion <strong>to</strong> Feminism and<br />

<strong>Philosophy</strong>, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 166–82.<br />

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