Collective memories, II, 9
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If people haven’t physically changed since before human history, and if the ways in which people’s minds function are biological, then there must have been neurodiverse people in the past. But who were they? And how do we find them? Let’s take an in-depth look at the state of the field and how neurodiverse listeners can directly make an impact.
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The question, then, is whether the historian is willing to share responsibility for constructing the narrative by which a science legitimizes itself as a form of knowledge. The issue that divides our symposiasts is that Smail and I appear to have no problem participating in this task, whereas Casper, Stadler, and Cooter do.
Fuller, Steve. “Neuroscience, Neurohistory, and the History of Science: A Tale of Two Brain Images.” Isis, vol. 105, no. 1, 2014, p. 104
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""How many neurons do you have?" In a fascinating review (link to PDF here) published in the European Journal of Neuroscience, Roberto Lent, Frederico Azevedo, Carlos Andrade-Moraes, and Ana Pinto point out that in some marvelous and mysterious way a number of dogmas have found their way into neuroscience...." Follow the link to read more.
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Earthly Lives and Deeds of the Beatrix Potter's Witnesses of the Latter-days Broadcasts (Remastered, 1), 2
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Wissenschaftsgeschichte und Dialektik der Aufklärung I [History of Science and the Dialectic of the Enlihghtenment II], 1
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