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Tag Archives: Reviews

Review: ‘Galileo Goes to Jail’ by Ronald L. Numbers (ed.)

Textbook HistoryBy Ronald LadouceurJanuary 6, 2010Leave a comment

January 6, 2010 Ronald L. Numbers has long been at war with the war metaphor. For more than two decades, Numbers has argued that conceptualizing the relationship between religion and science as a battle between powerful opposing forces is “neither useful nor tenable.” In Galileo Goes to Jail and Other Myths about Science and Religion…

Review: ‘Three Generations, No Imbeciles’ by Paul A. Lombardo

Textbook HistoryBy Ronald LadouceurAugust 30, 2009

August 30, 2009 Paul A. Lombardo’s history of Buck v. Bell, Three Generations, No Imbeciles (2008. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press.), is a terrific telling of case of Carrie Buck, a young woman sterilized by Virginia in 1927 in order to prevent her from having more “socially inadequate” offspring. In 1924, supporters of a…

© 2008-22 Ronald Ladouceur
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