BJHS, 1995, 28, 501 Index of authors Harvey W. Becher: Radicals, Whigs and Gordon McOuat and Mary P. Winsor: conservatives: the middle and lower J. B.S. Haldane’s Darwinism in its classes in the analytical revolution at religious context Cambridge in the age of aristocracy Alan Q. Morton: Concepts of power: A.E. L. Davis and J. V. Field (essay re- natural philosophy and the uses of view): Kepler translated machines in mid-eighteenth-century Peter Dear (essay review): Trust Boyle London Patricia Fara: ‘A treasure of hidden David Oldroyd (essay review): ‘Total’ vertues’: the attraction of magnetic history marketing Roy Porter: Medical lecturing in Bernard R. Goldstein and Peter Barker: Georgian London The role of Rothmann in the dis- Stephen Pumfrey: Who did the work? solution of the celestial spheres Experimental philosophers and public Rob Iliffe: Material doubts: Hooke, demonstrators in Augustan England artisan culture and the exchange of Simon Schaffer: The show that never information in 1670s London ends: perpetual motion in the early Mark Jackson: Images of deviance: vis- eighteenth century ual representations of mental defec- Larry Stewart and Paul Weindling: Philo- tives in early twentieth-century medical sophical threads: natural philosophy texts and public experiment among the Dong-Won Kim: J. J. Thomson and the weavers of Spitalfields emergence of the Cavendish School, Hugh Torrens: Mary Anning 1885-1900 (1799-1847) of Lyme; ‘the greatest Mark Edward Lewis (essay zeview): The fossilist the world ever knew’ Huainanzi Jane Wess: Lecture demonstrations and Roy MacLeod: ‘Kriegsgeologen and the real world: the case of cart-wheels practical men’: military geology and modern memory, 1914-18