Science and Society 95 



1935: British scientists of the nineteenth century (345 p., 12 pL, London; Isis 28, 

 507-08). 



1937: Famous American men of science (430 p., New York; Isis 28, 507-08). 



These two books containing 9 biographies of physicists (5 EngUsh and 4 Ameri- 

 can) are quoted because of the social theory which inspires them. 



1941: The social relations of science (697 p., New York; Isis 33, 345-47). 



English scientific journalist. 



Darlington, Cyril Dean ( 1903- ) : 



1948. The conflict of science and society. Conway Memorial Lecture (61 p., 

 London; Isis 41, 319). 



English geneticist, director of the John Innes Horticultural Institution. 



Gellhorn, Walter (1906- ): 



1950: Security, loyalty and science (Cornell, Ithaca, NY.). 



Haldane, John Burdon Sanderson (1892- ): 



1923: Daedalus, or science and the future (100 p., London). 



1938: The Marxist philosophy and the sciences (183 p., London). 



1938: Heredity and politics (202 p.. New York; Isis 29, 565). 



1940: Science and everyday Bfe (284 p., New York; Isis 33, 142). 



1940: Adventures of a biologist (290 p.. New York; Isis 33, 297-98, 524-25). 



1947: What is life? (251 p., New York). 



English biologist, Marxist. 



Hogben, Lancelot ( 1895- ) : 



1937: Mathematics for the million (660 p., New York; Isis 28, 138-40). 

 1938: Science for the citizen (1114 p.. New York; Isis, 31, 467-69). 

 1940: Dangerous thoughts (285 p.. New York; Isis 33, 144). 

 English physiologist, biologist. 



Huxley, Julian Sorell 1887- ): 



1923: Essays of a biologist (321 p., London). 



1931: What dare I think? The challenge of modern science to human action 

 and belief (287 p., London). 



1934: Scientific research and social needs (304 p., 40 pi., London). — American 

 edition titled: Science and social needs (304 p.. New York 1935; Isis 24, 188). 



1936: Africa view (463 p., London; Isis 28, 150-51). Impact of science on 

 colonial administration. 



1941: The uniqueness of man (313 p., London). — American edition titled: Man 

 stands alone (307 p.. New York 1941; Isis 33, 409). 



1944 (editor) : Reshaping man's heritage. Biology in the service of man (96 p., 

 7 pi., London; Isis 36, 59). 



1944: On living in a revolution (256 p., ill.. New York). 



1946: UNESCO, its purpose and philosophy (63 p., London; Washington, D.C. 

 1947; Isis 39, 116). 



1947: Man in the modern world (281 p., London). 



The author is an English biologist and was the first general director of UNESCO, 

 hence very well placed to study the impact of science on international life. 



Lilley, Samuel: 



1948: Man, machines and history, a short history of tools and machines in relation 

 to social progress (240 p., ill., London). 



1949: Social aspects of the history of science (Archives internationales d'histoire 

 des sciences, 28, 378-443). 



Report prepared for the International Union of the History of Science. The 

 author is an English historian of physics. 



Lindsay, Jack ( 1900- ) : 



1949: Marxism and contemporary science, or the Fullness of life (261 p., Lon- 

 don; Isis 41, 320). 



