Gerald L. Geison Explained

Gerald L. Geison
Birth Date:March 26, 1943
Birth Place:Savanna, Illinois
Death Place:Princeton, New Jersey
Nationality:American
Fields:History
Workplaces:Princeton University
Alma Mater:Yale University
Beloit College
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Gerald Lynn Geison (March 26, 1943 – July 3, 2001) was an American historian who died at 58.[1] [2]

Opinions on his work

Notes and References

  1. News: Gerald L. Geison, 58, Historian Who Found a Flawed Pasteur . Anahad . O'Connor . July 12, 2001 . .
  2. John E. . Lesch . Eloge: Gerald Lynn Geison, 1943–2001 . . 95 . 3 . 2004 . 449–451 . 10.1086/428965 . 143770615 .
  3. Necrology of the Princeton University, online
  4. T. . Söderqvist . C. . Stillwell . Essay Review: The Historiography of Immunology is Still in Its Infancy . . 32 . 1 . 205–215 . 1999 . 10.1023/A:1004654415985 . 11623813 . 22176341 .
  5. Bruno Latour, Pasteur : guerre et paix des microbes, Paris, 2001, p. 10.
  6. Dominique Raynaud, "La correspondance de F.-A. Pouchet avec les membres de l'Académie des Sciences: une réévaluation du débat sur la génération spontanée", European Journal of Sociology, 1999, 40 (2), p. 257-276, online.
  7. Dominique Raynaud, Sociologie des controverses scientifiques, Paris, PUF, 2003, p. 45-80.
  8. Joseph Gal, "In defense of Louis Pasteur: Critique of Gerald Geison's deconstruction of Pasteur's discovery of molecular chirality", Chirality, January 31, 2019, online.