• Articles in non-Chinese(2006~2013)
  • Update Time: 2014-02-26

1. Chen Yue. The Use of Galileo’s Theory of the Strength of Materials by the Jesuit in China, in: Transformation and Transmission: Chinese Mechanical Knowledge and the Jesuit Intervention (Zhang Baichun, Juergen Renn eds.), Preprint 313, Berlin: Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, 2006, pp.139-148.

2. Fang Yibing. British Iron and Steel Technology's Transfer in Early Modern East Asia: The Case of Qingxi Iron Works, China and Kamaishi Iron Works, Japan. In: Liao Yuqun, Feng Lisheng et al (eds). Multi-Cultural Perspectives of the History of Science and Technology in China: Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on the History of Science in China, Beijing: Science Press. 2012, pp.224-232.

3. Gao Shan. Does gravity induce wavefunction collapse? An examination of Penrose's conjecture, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics, Volume 44, Issue 2, 2013, pp.148-151.

4. Gao Shan. A discrete model of energy-conserved wavefunction collapse, Proceedings of the Royal Society, A 469, 2013.

5. Gao Shan. A quantum physical argument for panpsychism, Journal of Consciousness Studies, 20 (2013), pp.59-70.

6. Gao Shan. Interpreting the wave function: What are electrons? And how do they move? Discusiones Filosóficas, 14 (22), 2013, pp.13-23.

7. Guo Jinhai. Selection and Transformation under the Influence of the Soviet Union: Formulation of the Regulations on Postgraduate Cultivation by Chinese Academy of Sciences in Its Early Stage, Sociology of Science & Technology, Volume 4, No.1, 2013, pp.40-45.

8. Guo Shuchun. 《算数書》に關する問題点, Memoirs of the Institute Wasan, No.1, 2004.

9. Han Qi. “The Jesuits and their Study of Chinese Astronomy and Chronology in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, ” in Luís Manuel Roberto Saraiva ed., Europe and China: Science and Arts in the 17th and 18th Centuries (History of Mathematical Sciences: Portugal and East Asia, IV). SingaporeWorld Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd, 2012, pp. 71-79.

10. Han Qi. From Adam Schall von Bell to J.N. Smogulecki: The Introduction of European Astrology in late Ming and Early Qing China, Monumenta Serica, 59(2011), 485-490.

11. Han Qi. “Between the Kangxi Emperor (r.1662-1722) and Leibniz—Joachim Bouvet’s (1656-1730) Accommodation Policy and the Study of the Yijing” in Shinzo Kawamura & Cyril Veliath eds. Beyond Borders: A Global Perspective of Jesuit Mission History (Tokyo: Sophia University Press, 2009), pp. 172-181.

12. Han Qi. Siu Man-keung, On the Myth of an Ancient Chinese Theorem about Primality, Taiwanese Journal of Mathematics, 12(4), July 2008, pp. 941-949.

13. Han Qi. Le début de la diffusion des techniques d’imprimerie occidentales en Chine à la fin des Qing, Histoire et civilisation du livre, Vol.3, 2007.


14. Catherine JamiHan Qi. The Reconstruction of Imperial Mathematics in China During the Kangxi Reign (1662-1722), Early Science and Medicine, Vol.8, No.2, 2003.

15. Han Qi. “L'enseignement des sciences mathématiques sous le règne de Kangxi (1662-1722) et son contexte social,” in Education et Instruction en Chine. II. Les formations spécialisées, eds. Christine Nguyen Tri and Catherine Despeux (Paris-Louvain: Editions Peeters, 2003), pp.69-88..

16. Han Qi. Science and Belief, Ex-Change, No.8, 2003, pp.18-22.

17. Liao Yuqun, Feng Lisheng et al (eds). Multi-Cultural Perspectives of the History of Science and Technology in China: Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on the History of Science in China, Beijing: Science Press. 2012.

18. Liu Dun. The China Connection: A Conversation with Liu Dun, History of Science Society Newsletter, Vol.34, No.3, 2005.

19. Liu Dun. Three outstanding female physicists in contemporary China, Women Scholars and institutions, Vol.13, 2004.

20. Liu Yidong. Opinion Search and Opinion Mining: A New Type of Information Technology Bringing about New Scientific and Talent Revolution, Instrumentation, Measurement, Circuits and Systems (2012) 127, Springer Press, pp.1019-1024.

21. Liu Yidong. The Biggest Challenge Facing the Knowledge Economy and Mode of knowledge Creation with Lower-Risk, in: Blanca Martin and Dan Remenyi (eds). ECKM 2007, 8th European Conference on Knowledge Management. Volume 2 Academic Conferences Limited. 2007. pp.573-577.

22. Luo GuihuanLi Ang. China connection of the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, Protein & Cell, Vol.3, No.2, 2012, pp.89-90.

23. Su Rongyu.The Rebirth of traditional Handicraft---- A Case of Sword Making in ChinaProceedings of International Forum for the UNESCO-Accredited NGOs of the Intangible Cultural Heritage2011.10.

24. Su Rongyu. A State Project of China, Zwischen Selbstbestimmung und Selbstbehauptung, Vol.1, No.1, 2008.

25. Sun Lie, Zhang Baichun, Tsung-Yi Lin, Zhizhong Zhang, An Investigation and Reconstruction of Traditional Vertical-axile-styled Chinese Great Windmill and its Square–pallet chain-pump. in: Hong-Sen Yan and M. Ceccarelli. Proceedings of the International Symposium on History of Machines and Mechanisms 2008, Springer, 2008, pp.295-308.

26. Sun Xiaochun. Moral and Political Significances of Nature in Ancient China, Studies in the History of Natural Sciences, Vol.24, No.5, 2005.

27. Tian Miao. A Formal System of the Gougu Method: A STUDY ON LI RUI’S DETAILED OUTLINE OF MATHEMATICAL PROCEDURES FOR THE RIGHT-ANGLED TRIANGLE, in: Karine Chemla ed., The History of Mathematical Proof in Ancient Traditions, Cambridge University Press, 2012pp.552-573.

28. Tian Miao, Zhang Baichun. The Development of Knowledge on Levers in Ancient China. in: Hong-Sen Yan and M. Ceccarelli. Proceedings of the International Symposium on History of Machines and Mechanisms, Springer, 2008, pp.251-268.

29. Tian Miao. Mechanical Knowledge in Ancient Chinese Cosmology, in: Transformation and Transmission: Chinese Mechanical Knowledge and the Jesuit Intervention (Zhang Baichun, Juergen Renn eds.), Preprint 313, Berlin: Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, 2006. Pp.37-48.

30. Tian Miao. Mechanical Knowledge in the Jiuzhang Suanshu, in: Transformation and Transmission: Chinese Mechanical Knowledge and the Jesuit Intervention (Zhang Baichun, Juergen Renn eds.), Preprint 313, Berlin: Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, 2006. pp.55-74.

31. Tian Miao. The Transmission of European Mathematics in the Kangxi Reign (1662-1722)—Looking at the International Role China could play from an Historical Perspective, in: China’s New Role in the International Community: Challenges and Expectations for the 21st Century (Heinz-Dieter Assmann, Karin Moser v. Filseck ed.) , Peter Lang, 2005, pp. 217-234.

32. Tian Miao. The Westernization of Chinese mathematicsA Case study on the development of Duoji Method in Qing China, EASTM, No.2, 2003.

33. Wang Lina. Debate on Work Guideline of Chinese Academy of Sciences in 1981-1983, Sociology of Science & Technology, Volume 4, No.1, 2013, pp.46-52.

34. Wang Yangzong. The History and Institutional Characteristics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences: a Sketchy Account, Sociology of Science & Technology, Volume 4, No.1, 2013, pp.14-23.

35. Xu Fengxian. Using Sequential Relations of Day-dates to Determine the Temporal Scope of W.Zhou Lunar Phase Terms, Early China, Vol.33-34, 2010, pp.171-198.

36. Xu YibaoXu Fengxian. Chen Meidong (1942-2008), Historia Mathematica, Vol.37, No.4, 2010, pp.565-567.

37. Yao Licheng. Tentative Discussion on E. Diaz and the influence of Tianwenlueon Traditional Calendar, Multi-culture Perspective of the History of Science and Technology in China, Proceedings of the 12the International Conference on the History of Science in China, 2012, pp.147-152.

38. Zhang Baichun. The Transmission of the European Clock-making Technology into China in the 17-18th Centuries, in: Teun Koetsier, Marco Cecacarelli. Explorations in the History of Machines and Mechanisms, Springer, 2012, pp.565-577

39. Zhang Baichun, Tian Miao. Archimedean Mechanical Knowledge in 17th Century China, in: Stephanos A. Paipetis, Marco Ceccarelli. The Genius of Archimedes-23 Chenturies of Influence on Mathematics, Science and Engineering, Springer, 2010, pp.189-205

40. Zhang Baichun. Ancient Chinese Windmills. in: Hong-Sen Yan and M. Ceccarelli. Proceedings of the International Symposium on History of Machines and Mechanisms 2008, Springer, 2008, pp.203-214.

41. Jiuchun Zhang, Baichun Zhang. Founding of the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Computing Technology. IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, 2007, pp.16-33.

42. Zhang Baichun, Tian Miao. Wang Zheng and the Transmission of Western Mechanical Knowledge to China, Transformation and Transformation and Transmission, in: Transformation and Transmission: Chinese Mechanical Knowledge and the Jesuit Intervention (Zhang Baichun, Juergen Renn eds.), preprint 313 of Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, 2006, pp.75-88.

43. Zhang Baichun, Zhang Jiuchun, Yao Fang. Technology Transfer from the Soviet Union to the P. R. China: 1949-1966, Comparative Technology Transfer and Society, Vol.4, 2006, No.2, pp.105-167.

44. Zhang Baichun. The Introduction of European Astronomical Instruments and the Technology Related into China during the 17th Century. EASTM, Volume 20, 2003.

45. Zhang Jiuchen. Sino-Soviet Cooperation in National Resources Surveys: Interactions between the Two Academies, Sociology of Science & Technology, Volume 4, No.1, 2013., pp.31-39.

46. Zhang Li. Soviet Experts in Chinese Academy of Sciences: Hittorical review of cooperation and exchange between Chinese and Soviet Academy of Sciences, Sociology of Science & Technology, Volume 4, No.1, 201, pp.24-30.

47. Zhang Li. From the Soviet Union to the U.S., Historia Scientiarum, Vol.16, No.3, 2007.

48. Zheng Shu. Ging-Hsi Wong and Chinese physiopsychology, Protein & Cell, Vol.4, No.8, 2013, pp.563-564.

49. Zheng Shu, Wu Xian: Founder of Chinese Biochemistry and Nutriology, Protein & Cell, Vol.3, No.5, 2012, pp.323-324.

50. Zou Dahai. Shuihudi bamboo strips of the Qin Dynasty and Mathematics in Pre-Qin Period, Frontiers of the History in China, Vol.2, No.4, 2007.

51. Zou Dahai. The Concept of Force (li) in Early China, in: Transformation and Transmission: Chinese Mechanical Knowledge and the Jesuit Intervention (Zhang Baichun, Juergen Renn eds.), Preprint 313 of Max-Planck Institute for the History of Science, 2006, pp.11-36.