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Dániel Margócsy
Name: | Dániel Margócsy |
Affiliation: | Department of History and Philosophy of Science |
E-mail: | (only provided to users who are logged into talks.cam) |
Last login: | |
Public lists managed by Dániel Margócsy
Talks given by Dániel Margócsy
Obviously this only lists talks that are listed through talks.cam. Furthermore, this facility only works if the speaker's e-mail was specified in a talk. Most talks have not done this.
Talks organised by Dániel Margócsy
This list is based on what was entered into the 'organiser' field in a talk. It may not mean that Dániel Margócsy actually organised the talk, they may have been responsible only for entering the talk into the talks.cam system.
- Self-translating science in early modern Europe: preliminary insights from the project Writing Bilingually, 1465–1700
- Artists as futurists? On the history of durability in art and the making of the future
- Women's medical books in the Crown of Aragon, 1300–1500
- Whose problem? Gendering infertility in medieval thought, c.1150–1350
- Cultures of curiosity in Polish/Royal Prussia, 1650–1760
- Food, drink and bodies in-between in the colonial space: culinary (re-)encounters at the Pietist Protestant Mission in Tranquebar, c.1700–1730
- The science of pleasure in early modern South Asia
- Challenging the Hunterian hegemony: rethinking the visual culture of pregnancy in mid-eighteenth-century Britain
- Splicing the soul: brain anatomy and interspecies difference in early modern Europe
- Towards a physical botany: the ascent of water in plants in seventeenth-century studies
- The history of medicine in early South Asia: using digital humanities to quell the panic of facing huge manuscript traditions and the value of doing research in plain view
- Digestion in Late Renaissance medicine and alchemy
- Challenging the Hunterian hegemony: rethinking the visual culture of pregnancy in mid-eighteenth-century Britain
- Mining ecologies: socio-natural landscapes of extraction and knowledge in the early modern period
- Boiling it down: Chinese tea in the first Dutch medical journal, 1680–1688
- 'Description, figure and colour combined': in search of perfection in zoological representation, c. 1820–1850
- Overcoming childlessness: (in)fertility in early modern North India
- From indigenous panaceas to global drugs, or, how the Philippine plant igasud became the St Ignatius bean (c.1670–1750)
- Thinking with sea monsters: re-thinking early modern maps and epistemic images
- Authorship and mathematical skills between artisans and scholars: the geometries of Sébastien Le Clerc (1637–1714)
- A political ecology of horse breeding in early modern Spain and Spanish colonial America
- Alhazen's Perspectiva legacy in science and art
- Migrant miners and empires: the social technology of tin mining in the age of global trade
- Contagion and the politics of maritime quarantine during the Marseille plague (1720)
- Lovesickness (ʿishq) in the Arabic medical commentaries (1200–1520)
- Arabo-Persian texts as a vehicle for transmission of medical knowledge in late medieval and early modern China
- Philosophy for anatomists: Francis Glisson and the peculiar fits of irritable matter
- Marcus Marci Von Kronland (1595–1667) on the embryo's ensoulment?
- Ship tracks on European maps and charts, c.1500–c.1800
- Virtual Conversation: Citizen Science
- Virtual Conversation: Central European Science in Perspective
- Virtual Conversation: Calculating Trust
- Virtual Conversation: Legacies of Early Modern Colonial Science
- Virtual Conversation: Histories of Medicine for the 21st Century
- Affect and empiricism in the early modern Arctic
- Virtual Conversation: Pandemic and Policy
- Reconstructing Noah's ark in the 17th-century Dutch Republic
- Ladies at sea: seasickness and the female body
- Giants and national identity in early modern Europe
- Surface thinking: skin in early modern medicine
- From cures to courts of justice: medical encounters, the issue of generation, and social order in early modern Spain
- Heaven and Earth are within one's grasp: the healer's body-as-technology in classical Chinese medicine
- Missing friars: rethinking late medieval medicine
- From pustulent penises to death by celibacy: thinking about sexual health in medieval Europe
- From angel food to vegetable diets: medicalizing the feminine appetite in the British 18th century
- Writing the Scientific Revolution in Louis XIV's France
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