SOCIAL SCIENTIST
91. K. Mendelssohn, Science and Western Domination, Thames and Hudson, London, 1976.
Anouar Abdel Malek, Civilization and Social Theory, Macmillan, London, 1981,43.
93. Joseph Needham, 'Address to the opening session of XV International Congress of History of Science, Aug. 11,1977,' The British journal of History of Science, XI, 38, 1978, 111-113.
94. In the 1860s in Orissa, Chandrashekhar Samanta, without any western education or western instruments, had made excellent astronomical observations. His Siddanta Darpan, composed on a palm leaf, contained 2500 slokas of which 2284 were original and 216 quoted from the old Siddhantas. The Kayastha Samachar, I, 1,1899, 36-40.
95. Sumit Sarkar, op. cit., OUP, Delhi, 1997, 23.
96. Ashis Nandy, Science, Hegemony and Violence, OUP, Delhi, 1990, 2.
97. David Gilmartin, 'Scientific Empire and Imperial Science: Colonialism and Irrigation Technology in the Indus Basin,' The Journal of Asian Studies, 53, 4, 1994, 1127-1149.
98. Dwijendra Tripathi, 'Colonialism and Technology Choices in India: A Historical Overview,' The Developing Economies, XXXIV, 1, 1996, 80-97. >. B.K. Sarkar, Education for Industrialisation, Calcutta, 1946.
100. Shula Marks, 'What is Colonial about Colonial Medicine?,' Social History of Medicine, X, 2, 1997, 205-219.
101. Cyan Prakash, 'The Modern Nation's Return in the Archaic,' Critical Inquiry, 23,1997, 536-556.
102. Marx was not a technological determinist though he attached great importance to technological factors. N. Rosenberg, 'Marx as a student of technology,' Monthly Review, 28, 1976, 56-77.
103. S. Sangwan, 'From Gentlemen Amateurs to Professionals: Reassessing the Natural Science Tradition in Colonial India, 1780-1840, in R. Grove et. al. (eds.), Nature and the Orient, OUP, Delhi, 1998, 214.
104. Warwick Anderson, 'Where is the Postcoloniai History of Medicine,' Bulletin of The History of Medicine, 72, 1998, 522-530.
105. The Times of India, June 17, 1999, 13.