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Oxford Illustrated History The Oxford Illustrated History of Science, (Hardcover)
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Publishers Weekly,Morus (Shocking Bodies), professor of history at Aberystwyth University, gathers a fabulous series of essays from more than a dozen science historians that show science interacting with and being influenced by culture and society. It's a complex, two-part study that leads off with a global history of science followed by a history of how science is done. The first half proceeds chronologically from ancient Greece to the European Enlightenment, emphasizing how scientific endeavor parallels the needs of local culture. Aspects of astronomy and mathematics, for example, were studied to find the date of Easter and the direction of Mecca. The thematically oriented second half examines how science was affected by changes in public sentiment, as seen in both the development of Darwinism and biological science and in the horrors of eugenics. More conceptually, the roots of 21st-century debates in physics reveal ongoing disputes over the nature of theory and experimental proof within science. Meanwhile, the creation of the atom bomb, which advanced scientific study yet fostered a deep suspicion of it, exposes rifts between scientists and the wider public. The collection closes with a look at how that very public has been introduced to science. Morus and company succeed in showing science as a product of human culture, not a phenomenon apart from it. Illus. (Aug.) ��� Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.,Publishers Weekly,Publishers Weekly,Morus (Shocking Bodies), professor of history at Aberystwyth University, gathers a fabulous series of essays from more than a dozen science historians that show science interacting with and being influenced by culture and society. It's a complex, two-part study that leads off with a global history of science followed by a history of how science is done. The first half proceeds chronologically from ancient Greece to the European Enlightenment, emphasizing how scientific endeavor parallels the needs of local culture. Aspects of astronomy and mathematics, for example, were studied to find the date of Easter and the direction of Mecca. The thematically oriented second half examines how science was affected by changes in public sentiment, as seen in both the development of Darwinism and biological science and in the horrors of eugenics. More conceptually, the roots of 21st-century debates in physics reveal ongoing disputes over the nature of theory and experimental proof within science. Meanwhile, the creation of the atom bomb, which advanced scientific study yet fostered a deep suspicion of it, exposes rifts between scientists and the wider public. The collection closes with a look at how that very public has been introduced to science. Morus and company succeed in showing science as a product of human culture, not a phenomenon apart from it. Illus. (Aug.) ��� Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
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- Book formatHardcover
- Fiction/nonfictionNon-Fiction
- GenreTextbooks
- Publication dateAugust, 2017
- Pages448
- Reading levelGeneral
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The Oxford Illustrated History of Science is the first-ever fully illustrated global history of science, from Aristotle to the atom bomb - and beyond. The first part of the book tells the story of science in both the East and West from antiquity to the Enlightenment: from the ancient Mediterranean world to ancient China; from the exchanges between Islamic and Christian scholars in the Middle Ages to the Chinese invention of gunpowder, paper, and the printing press; from the Scientific Revolution of sixteenth and seventeenth century Europe to the intellectual ferment of the eighteenth century. The chapters that follow focus on the increasingly specialized story of science since the end of the eighteenth century, covering experimental science in the laboratory from Michael Faraday to CERN; the exploration of nature from intrepid Victorian explorers to twentieth century primatologists; the mapping of the universe from the discovery of Uranus to the Big Bang Theory; the impact of evolutionary ideas from Lamarck, Darwin, and Wallace to DNA; and the story of theoretical physics from James Clark Maxwell to Quantum Theory and beyond. A concluding chapter reflects on how scientists have communicated their work to a wider public, from the Great Exhibition of 1851 to the Internet in the early twenty-first century.
Publishers Weekly,Morus (Shocking Bodies), professor of history at Aberystwyth University, gathers a fabulous series of essays from more than a dozen science historians that show science interacting with and being influenced by culture and society. It's a complex, two-part study that leads off with a global history of science followed by a history of how science is done. The first half proceeds chronologically from ancient Greece to the European Enlightenment, emphasizing how scientific endeavor parallels the needs of local culture. Aspects of astronomy and mathematics, for example, were studied to find the date of Easter and the direction of Mecca. The thematically oriented second half examines how science was affected by changes in public sentiment, as seen in both the development of Darwinism and biological science and in the horrors of eugenics. More conceptually, the roots of 21st-century debates in physics reveal ongoing disputes over the nature of theory and experimental proof within science. Meanwhile, the creation of the atom bomb, which advanced scientific study yet fostered a deep suspicion of it, exposes rifts between scientists and the wider public. The collection closes with a look at how that very public has been introduced to science. Morus and company succeed in showing science as a product of human culture, not a phenomenon apart from it. Illus. (Aug.) ��� Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.,Publishers Weekly,Publishers Weekly,Morus (Shocking Bodies), professor of history at Aberystwyth University, gathers a fabulous series of essays from more than a dozen science historians that show science interacting with and being influenced by culture and society. It's a complex, two-part study that leads off with a global history of science followed by a history of how science is done. The first half proceeds chronologically from ancient Greece to the European Enlightenment, emphasizing how scientific endeavor parallels the needs of local culture. Aspects of astronomy and mathematics, for example, were studied to find the date of Easter and the direction of Mecca. The thematically oriented second half examines how science was affected by changes in public sentiment, as seen in both the development of Darwinism and biological science and in the horrors of eugenics. More conceptually, the roots of 21st-century debates in physics reveal ongoing disputes over the nature of theory and experimental proof within science. Meanwhile, the creation of the atom bomb, which advanced scientific study yet fostered a deep suspicion of it, exposes rifts between scientists and the wider public. The collection closes with a look at how that very public has been introduced to science. Morus and company succeed in showing science as a product of human culture, not a phenomenon apart from it. Illus. (Aug.) ��� Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
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Specifications
Book format
Hardcover
Fiction/nonfiction
Non-Fiction
Genre
Textbooks
Publication date
August, 2017
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