Persistent URL of this record https://hdl.handle.net/1887/81791
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- Title Pages_Acknowledgements_Contents
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- Introduction
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- Bibliography
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- Summary in Dutch
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- Curriculum Vitae
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Conflicting virtues of scholarship : moral economies in late nineteenth-century German Academia
I take a close look at peer networks of leading late nineteenth-century German academics. I mostly focus on the orientalist Theodor Nöldeke, the experimental psychologist Wilhelm Wundt and the bacteriologists Robert Koch and Emil Behring. This interdisciplinary perspective allows me to identify virtues shared by scholars with very different intellectual backgrounds who use different methods to study different matters.
My research shows that loyal...Show moreAt least since the late twentieth century, historians of science have discussed the skills, character and virtues that make for good scholarship. Different virtues have been emphasized by different authors. These virtues include love of truth, impartiality and imagination. In my study I look at virtues of scholarship in the practice of everyday scholarly life, such as collaborating on a text edition, editing a scholarly journal and evaluating one’s peers in book reviews and letters of recommendation.
I take a close look at peer networks of leading late nineteenth-century German academics. I mostly focus on the orientalist Theodor Nöldeke, the experimental psychologist Wilhelm Wundt and the bacteriologists Robert Koch and Emil Behring. This interdisciplinary perspective allows me to identify virtues shared by scholars with very different intellectual backgrounds who use different methods to study different matters.
My research shows that loyal collegiality and critical independence were the virtues that were central to all practices of scholarship across all disciplines. The relations between these virtues, however, were complicated. Academics continuously struggled to balance loyalty and independence vis-à-vis each other, institutions of scholarship, the state and the private sector, in what is best described as a moral economy of scholarship.Show less
- All authors
- Engberts, C.A.
- Supervisor
- Paul, H.J.; Wils, K.
- Committee
- Dorsman, L.J.; Jorink, H.G.M.; Stamhuis, I.H.
- Qualification
- Doctor (dr.)
- Awarding Institution
- Institute for History, Faculty of Humanities, Leiden University
- Date
- 2019-12-12
Funding
- Sponsorship
- NWO