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Social History of Medicine 2000 13(3):535-546; doi:10.1093/shm/13.3.535
© 2000 by Society for the Social History of Medicine
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Discussion Point

Social Construction in a Cold Climate: A Response to David Harley, ‘Rhetoric and the Social Construction of Sickness and Healing’ and to Paolo Palladino's Comment on Harley

IVAN DALLEY CROZIER*

* Research Fellow, Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at UCL 24 Eversholt St, London NW1 1AD, UK. E-mail: i.dalley-crozier{at}wellcome.ac.uk

The relation of rhetoric to science depends also on whether—to put the two extremes—science is perceived as accretive and progressive or as largely a history of dead ends in experiment and odd dead ‘facts’ now to be read only as allegories of the society that produced them. (Gillian Beer and Herminio Martins1)


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