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Traces keep time and make the past visible. As such, they continue to be a fundamental resource for scientific knowledge production in modernity. While the art of trace reading is a millennia-old practice, tracings are specifically produced in the photographic archive or in the scientific laboratory. The material traces of the forms represent the objects and causes to which they owe their existence while making them invisible at the moment of their visualization. By looking at different techniques for the production of traces and their changes over two centuries, the contributions show the continuities they have, both in the laboratories and in large colliders of particle physics. This volume, inspired by Carlo Ginzburg's early works, formulates a theory of traces for the 21st century.
Cell interaction. --- Systemic memory hypothesis. --- Cellular recognition. --- Evidence. --- Proof --- Belief and doubt --- Faith --- Logic --- Philosophy --- Truth --- Cell recognition --- Self-recognition (Immunology) --- Cell interaction --- Immunology --- Cellular memory hypothesis --- Hypothesis, Cellular memory --- Hypothesis, Systemic memory --- Memory --- Cell-cell interaction --- Cell communication --- Cellular communication (Biology) --- Cellular interaction --- Intercellular communication --- Cellular control mechanisms --- Systemic memory hypothesis --- Cellular recognition --- Evidence --- Biologie --- Mémoire --- natural science. --- trace production.
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