TY - JOUR AU - Mullins, Nicholas C. AB - NICHOLAS MULLINS Associate Professor of Sociology at Indiana University. is 1. Thomas S. Kuhn, The Structure o Scientific Revolutions, 2d ed. (Chicago, f 1970). 2. Derek J . deS. Price, Little Science, Big Science (New York, 1963). 3. Diana Crane, “Social Structure in a Group of Scientists: A Test of the ‘Invisible College’ Hypothesis,” American Sociological Review 34 (June 1969): 335-52. 4. David L. Krantz, “The Separate Worlds of Operant and Non-Operant Psychology,” Journal of Applied Behavioral Analysis 4 , no. 61 (1971): 61-70. 5. Belver C. Griffith and A. J. Miller, “Networks of Informal Communication Among Scientifically Productive Scientists,” in Communication Among Scientists and Engineers, ed. Carnot E. Nelson and Donald K. Pollock (Lexington, Heath Lexington Book, 1970). 6. Nicholas C. Mullins, “A Model for the Development of a Scientific Specialty: The Phage Group and the Origins of Molecular Biology,” Minerva 10 (Jan. 1972): 5 1-82. 7. Nicholas C. Mullins, “The Development of Specialties in Social Science: The Case of Ethnomethodology,” Science Studies (July 1973). 8. Belver C. Griffith and Nicholas C. Mullins, “Coherent Social Groups in Scientific Change: Invisible Colleges May Be Consistent Throughout Science,” Science 177, no. 4053 (15 Sept. 1972): 959-964. 9. Mullins, “A TI - New Causal Theory: An Elite Specialty in Social Science JF - History of Political Economy DO - 10.1215/00182702-7-4-499 DA - 1975-12-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/duke-university-press/new-causal-theory-an-elite-specialty-in-social-science-zyiHMagL4w SP - 499 VL - 7 IS - 4 DP - DeepDyve ER -