-2024
V. Christopoulou & Arabatzis, T., “From the Determination of the Ohm to the Discovery of Argon: Lord Rayleigh’s Strategies of Experimental Control,” in Archimedes 71(Springer, 2024), pp. 243-267, Available Online
-2023
T. Arabatzis, “Cognitive instrumentalism and the history of science, ” Book Forum on The instrument of science: Scientific anti-realism revitalised by Darrell Rowbottom, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science 98 (2023),
1-3. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.shpsa.2023.01.008
Panoutsopoulos, G. & Gavroglou, K., “From Big Science to Bigger Science: preparingfor the LHC”, Chapter25 of Big Science in the 21st Century, edited by Charitos, Panagiotis; Arabatzis, Theodore; Cliff,Harry; Dissertori, Günther; Forneris, Juliette; Li-Ying, Jason. Bristol, UK:IOP Publishing, 2023, pp. 25-1-25-16, Online
Panoutsopoulos, G., Dissertation “Planning CERN’s Large Hadron Collider: An Entanglement of Physics, Technology and Diplomacy”, Department of History and Philosophy of Science, National Kapodistrian University of Athens,2023,Online
-2022
Kampouridis. S., Dissertation “Bytes at test tubes: the emergence of computational quantum chemistry”, Department of History and Philosophy of Science, National Kapodistrian University of Athens,2022, Available online
Aristotle Tympas, ‘History of Computing and Telecommunications in Greece: From Human Computers to Electronic Mainframe and Home/Personal Computers’, in Volume in Honor of Emeritus Professor Thomas Sfikopoulos (Τιμητικός Τόμος για τον Ομότιμο Καθηγητή Θωμά Σφηκόπουλο), National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Press, Athens, 423-442 (2022)
S. Kampouridis, A. Simões & T. Arabatzis, “Quantum Chemistry in
Historical Perspective,” in O. Lombardi, J. C. Martínez González, S.
Fortin (eds.), /Philosophical Perspectives in Quantum Chemistry/
(Springer, 2022), pp. 3-28.
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-98373-4_1
-2021
Panoutsopoulos, G., Arabatzis, T. CERN’s Balancing Act Between Unity and
Disunity: The “Sister Experiments” UA1 and UA2 and CERN’s First Nobel
Prize. Phys. Perspect. 23, 181–201 (2021).
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00016-021-00281-5
Arabatzis, T. (2021). Do scientific objects have a life (which may end)?
Science in Context, 34(2), 195-208.
doi:10.1017/S026988972200014X
-2020
T. Arabatzis, “20th Century Philosophy of Science in Focus,” Review
of J. Losee, /The Golden Age of Philosophy of Science 1945 to 2000/
(London: Bloomsbury, 2019), /International Studies in the Philosophy
of Science/, 33 (2020), 53-57.
https://doi.org/10.1080/02698595.2020.1784585