| Literature DB >> 19830958 |
Abstract
Taking a german professor of pharmacology, Wolfgang Heubner (1877-1957), as an example, the paper shows how hagiographic traditions were used to construct a scientific ideal in Post-War Germany. This ideal tended to (re-)legitimate German Science after World War II and to justify institutional and personal continuities in the 1950s, but I argue that it is a specific construction of the 1950s, thus serving to build a new image of science in a democratic society.Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 19830958
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Ges Gesch ISSN: 0939-351X