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Session Submission Type: Organized Session
This symposium convenes scholars to explore the dynamic interplay between local development and global exchanges throughout China’s scientific and technological history. The presentations span a broad chronological scope and embrace diverse themes—ranging from ancient material processing, Chinese bronze chime bells and chariot systems in comparative perspective, to traditional architectural techniques and knowledge transmission along the Silk Road. Modern and contemporary case studies examine pivotal developments such as the invention of the finite element method, wartime scientific mobilization, the transnational transfer of V-2 rocket technology and pressurized water reactor (PWR) technology, as well as breakthroughs in non-accelerator high-energy physics at the Reactor Neutrino Experiment. Further analyses investigate the rapid rise of China’s neodymium iron boron magnet industry, the cultivation of basic science talent, and historical priority disputes in biology. These contributions illustrate the complex factors--local adaptation, international collaboration, resource mobilization, and theoretical innovation--that have shaped China’s unique pathway in the global history of science and technology, which will be a crucial promotion of the simplistic narratives of origin and emphasizing processes of adaptation and transformation.
The Packages of Knowledge among Late Silk Road Traveler Groups - Wei Chen, Institute for the History of Natural Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences
The Priority Dispute in Early 20th-Century Chinese Biology: Competing Epistemic Frameworks of Geneticists and Embryologists - Jiayuan Liang
Scientific and Technological Mobilization of Chinese Scientists During World War II - Gong Wang, Institute for the History of Natural Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences; Yang Jian, Tsinghua University
The importance of basic science talent cultivation to sustainable development: A historical perspective - Pu Chen