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Teacher-directed scientific change:The case of the English Scientific Revolution

Julius Koschnick
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Julius Koschnick: University of Southern Denmark

No 274, Working Papers from European Historical Economics Society (EHES)

Abstract: While economic factors in directed technical and scientific change have been widely studied, the role of teacher-directed scientific change has received little attention. This paper studies teacher-directed scientific change for one of the largest changes in the direction of research, the Scientific Revolution. Specifically, the paper considers the case of the English Scientific Revolution at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge during 1600-1720. It argues that exposure to different teachers shaped students' direction of research and can partly account for the successful trajectory of English science. For this, the paper introduces a novel dataset on the universe of 111,242 students at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge and their publications. Using natural language processing, the paper derives a measure of researchers' direction of research. To derive causal estimates of teacher-student effects, the paper uses an instrumental variable design that predicts students’ choice of college based on their home regions, a stacked differences-in-differences approach based on teachers leaving their college, and a natural experiment based on the expulsion of teachers following the English Civil War. The results illustrate how teacher-directed change can contribute to paradigm change.

Keywords: Directed Technical Change; Knowledge Diffusion; Innovation; Human Capital; Natural Language Processing (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: I23 N33 O14 O31 O33 O43 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 129 pages
Date: 2025-03
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-his
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