![From Topos to Oikos: The Standardization of Glass Containers as Epistemic Boundaries in Modern Laboratory Research (1850–1900) | Science in Context | Cambridge Core From Topos to Oikos: The Standardization of Glass Containers as Epistemic Boundaries in Modern Laboratory Research (1850–1900) | Science in Context | Cambridge Core](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20151117044857403-0954:S0269889715000137_fig4g.gif?pub-status=live)
From Topos to Oikos: The Standardization of Glass Containers as Epistemic Boundaries in Modern Laboratory Research (1850–1900) | Science in Context | Cambridge Core
![From Topos to Oikos: The Standardization of Glass Containers as Epistemic Boundaries in Modern Laboratory Research (1850–1900) | Science in Context | Cambridge Core From Topos to Oikos: The Standardization of Glass Containers as Epistemic Boundaries in Modern Laboratory Research (1850–1900) | Science in Context | Cambridge Core](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary-alt:20160710165622-72731-mediumThumb-S0269889715000137_fig3g.jpg?pub-status=live)
From Topos to Oikos: The Standardization of Glass Containers as Epistemic Boundaries in Modern Laboratory Research (1850–1900) | Science in Context | Cambridge Core
![Wie entstehen Gläser? Glasbildung ist verhinderte Kristallisation. Glas ist eine eingefrorene unterkühlte Schmelze. metastabil - PDF Kostenfreier Download Wie entstehen Gläser? Glasbildung ist verhinderte Kristallisation. Glas ist eine eingefrorene unterkühlte Schmelze. metastabil - PDF Kostenfreier Download](https://docplayer.org/docs-images/44/14821003/images/page_5.jpg)