Social Scientist. v 17, no. 190-91 (March 1989) p. 66.


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66 SOCIAL SCIENTIST

21. THE DAWN, December 1902, Calcutta, p. 176.

22. In 1903 he had published a rather interesting piece on The Spirit of Bacon's philosophy, THE DAWN. February 1903, no. 7, Vol 6.

23. Rabindra Narayan ghosh. The civilisation of northern India : A contribution to the study of Hindu-Moslem Relations, THE DAWN, Calcutta, May 1911, Vol xiv, no. 5

24. The Indian Review, December 1912, Vol. xiii, no. 12

25. Robert K. Merton, Science, Technology and Society in Seventeenth century England, New York, 1970. (26) Sir Sayyad Ahmed Khan, quoted inRajmohan Gandhi, Understanding the Muslim mind, Penguin Books, 1987.

27. Sir Sayyad Ahmed Khan, I slam and science, from S. H. Khan, Sources of Indian Tradition, (Ed. wr. T. de Vary et. al.), pp/ 743-4. 746.

28. Mahendra lal Sircar, The right pursuit of the physical sciences considered from the point of view of the individual as well as national regeneration, THE DAWN, October 1902, no. 3, Vol. vi, p.79.

29. Kri Marx, The Eighteenth Braumaire of Louis bonaparte, Moscow, 1977, p. 10.

30. David Gosling, Science and Religion, in India, Madras, 1976.

31. See Hindoo Patriot., May 15, 1856.

32. Y. Ramachandra,^ Treatise on the Problem of Maxima and Minima Solved by Algebra, London 1859. t. Ramachandra, A Specimen of a New Method of Differential Calculus called the Method of Constant Ratios. Calcutta, 1863. See also Dhruv Raina, S. Irfan Habib, Cultural Foundations of a nineteenth century mathematical project, to be published soon in Social Studies of Science

33. PC. Ray, History of Chemistry in ancient and medieval India.

34. K. Marx, F. Engels, The German Ideology, Moscow, 1964, p.43.

35. B. N. Seal, The Positive Sciences of the Ancient Hindus, Londom, 1915, pp.244-91, published as on the Scientific Method, in Debiprasad Chattopadhaya (Ed.), History of Science in India, Volime 1, New Delhi, 1982, pp. 36-63.

36. The structuring of the entire chapter on scientific method, and the section on inference clear1/ reflects the intellectual figure of Mill whom Seal appears to addressing. In pat-ticular, when discussing the Nyaya pramana of anumana, which he feels anticipates Mill's analysis of the syllogism as a material reference', cf ([35], p.41).

37. George Weiz, The Emergence of Modem Universities in France 1863-1914, Princeton, 1918. Quoted in Paul, op. cit. p.8

38. Walter Eugene dark. Science in India in G. T. Barratt (Ed.), The Legacy of India.

Clarendon Press, 1937, pp.355-365. 39 J. D. Bernal, Science and History, Watts and Company, 1954.

40. P. C. Ray, Makers of Modem Chemistry, Calcutta, 1925.

41. P. C. Ray, Chemistry in Ancient India, Address to Madras University, February 1918, published in 1918, in Dr. P.C. Ray,Essays and Discourses, natesan, Madras, 1918, pp. 73-89.

42. P. C. Ray.Antiquity of Hindu Chemistry, P. C. Ray, op. cit. pp.90-103.



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