George E. Smith (smith-ge)
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Bibliography
Cohen, I. Bernard and Smith, George E., eds. 2002a. The Cambridge Companion to Newton. Cambridge Companions to Philosophy. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Cohen, I. Bernard and Smith, George E. 2002b.
“Introduction.” in The Cambridge Companion to Newton, edited by
I. Bernard Cohen and George E. Smith, pp. 1–32. Cambridge
Companions to Philosophy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Iliffe, Rob and Smith, George E., eds. 2017a. The Cambridge Companion to Newton. 2nd ed.
Cambridge Companions to Philosophy.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. First edition: Cohen and Smith
(2002a), doi:10.1017/cco9781139058568.
Iliffe, Rob and Smith, George E. 2017b.
“Introduction.” in The Cambridge Companion to Newton, edited by
Rob Iliffe and George E. Smith, 2nd ed., pp. 1–33. Cambridge Companions to Philosophy. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press. First edition: Cohen and Smith (2002a),
doi:10.1017/cco9781139058568.
Kosslyn, Stephen Michael, Pinker, Steven, Smith, George E. and Shwartz, Steven P. 1979. “On the Demystification of Mental Imagery.”
Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2(4): 535–581.
Seth, Raghav and Smith, George E. 2020. Brownian Motion and Molecular Reality.
Oxford: Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/oso/9780190098025.001.0001.
Smith, George E. 1979. “Rigid Designation, Scope and Modality.” PhD
dissertation, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, Department of Philosophy.
Smith, George E. 2001. “J.J. Thomson and the Electron, 1897-1899.”
in Histories of the Electron. The Birth of
Microphysics, edited by Jed Z. Buchwald and Andrew Warwick, pp. 21–76. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
The MIT Press.
Smith, George E. 2002. “The Methodology of the Principia.” in
The Cambridge Companion to Newton,
edited by I. Bernard Cohen and George E.
Smith, pp. 138–173. Cambridge Companions to Philosophy. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Smith, George E. 2005. “Was
Wrong Newton Bad Newton?” in Wrong for the Right Reasons, edited by Jed Z.
Buchwald and Allan Franklin, pp. 127–160. Archimedes: New Studies in the History and Philosophy of
Science and Technology n. 11. Dordrecht: Springer.
Smith, George E. 2007a.
“Isaac Newton.” in The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Stanford, California: The Metaphysics Research Lab, Center for the Study
of Language; Information, https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2007/entries/newton/.
Smith, George E. 2007b. “Newton’s Philosophiae Naturalis Principia
Mathematica.” in The
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Stanford, California:
The Metaphysics Research Lab, Center for the Study of Language;
Information, https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2007/entries/newton-principia/.
Smith, George E. 2010. “Revisiting Accepted Science: The Indispensability of the
History of Science.” The Monist 93(4): 545–579.
Smith, George E. 2012. “How Newton’s Principa Changed
Physics.” in Interpreting Newton. Critical
Essays, edited by Andrew Janiak and Eric Schliesser, pp. 360–395. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Smith, George E. 2013. “Review of Harper (2012).”
Metascience 22(2).
Smith, George E. 2014. “Closing the Loop: Testing Newtonian Gravity, Then and
Now.” in Newton and
Empiricism, edited by Zvi Biener and Eric Schliesser, pp. 262–351. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199337095.003.0011.
Smith, George E. 2017. “The Methodology of the Principia.”
in The Cambridge Companion to
Newton, edited by Rob Iliffe
and George E. Smith, 2nd ed., pp.
187–228. Cambridge Companions to Philosophy.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. First edition: Cohen and Smith
(2002a), doi:10.1017/cco9781139058568.
Smith, George E. and Kosslyn, Stephen Michael. 1981. “An Information-Processing Theory of Mental Imagery: A
Case Study in the New Mentalistic Psychology.” in
PSA 1980: Proceedings of the
Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part
II: Symposium Papers, edited by Peter D. Asquith and Ronald N. Giere, pp. 247–266. East Lansing, Michigan:
Philosophy of Science Association.
Smith, George E. and Seth, Raghav. 2020. Brownian Motion and Molecular Reality.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Further References
Harper, William L. 2012. Isaac Newton’s Scientific Method: Turning Data Into
Evidence about Gravity and Cosmology. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199570409.001.0001.