The Cambridge history of science 5 The modern physical and mathematical sciences

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Weitere Verfasser: Lindberg, David C. 1935- (HerausgeberIn)
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Veröffentlicht: Cambridge [u.a.] Cambridge Univ. Press 2003
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adam_text CONTENTS Illustrations page xvü Notes on Contributors xix GeneralEditors Preface xxv Acknowledgments xxix Introduction: The Modern Physical and Mathematical Sciences i MARY JO NYE PART I. THE PUBLIC CULTURES OF THE PHYSICAL SCIENCES AFTER 1800 i Theories of Scientific Method: Models for the Physico Mathematical Sciences 21 NANCY CARTWRIGHT, STATHIS PSILLOS, AND HASOK CHANG Mathematics, Science, and Nature 22 Realism, Unity, and Completeness 2 5 Positivism 2 8 From Evidencc to Theory 29 Experimental Traditions 3 2 1 Intersections of Physical Science and Western Religion in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries 3 6 FREDERICK GREGORY The Plurality of Worlds 37 j The Endof the World 39 j The Implications of Materialism 43 From Confrontation to Peacerul Coexistence to Reengagement 46 Contemporary Concerns 49 i vüi Contents 3 A Twisted Tale: Women in the Physical Sciences in die Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries 5 4 MARGARET W. ROSSITER Precedents 5 4 Great Exceptions 5 5 Less Well Known Women 5 8 Rank and File Fighting for Access 5 9 Women s Colleges A World of Their Own 61 Graduate Work, (Male) Mentors, and Laboratory Access 62 Mens and Women s Work in Peace and War 6 3 Scientific Marriages and Families 6 5 Underrecognition 66 Post World War II and Women s Liberation 67 Rise of Gender Stereotypes and Sex Typed Curricula 7° 4 Scientists and Their Publics: Popularization of Science in the Nineteenth Century 72 DAVID M. KNIGHT Making Science Loved 74 The March of Mind 7 5 Read All About It 76 Crystal Palaces 77 The Church Scientific 78 Deep Space and Time 80 Beyond the Fringe 8 3 A Second Culture? 8 5 Talking Down 87 Signs and Wonders 8 8 5 Literature and the Modern Physical Sciences 91 PAMELA GOSSIN Two Cultures: Bridges, Trenches, and Beyond 93 The Historical Interrelations of Literature and Newtonian Science 9 5 Literature and the Physical Sciences after 1800: Forms and Contents 98 Literature and Chemistry 99 Literature and Astronomy, Cosmology, and Physics 100 Interdisciplinary Perspectives and Scholarship 103 Literature and the Modern Physical Sciences in the History of Science 106 Literature and the Modern Physical Sciences: New Forms and Directions 108 Contents ix PART II. DISCIPLINE BUILDING IN THE SCIENCES: PLACES, INSTRUMENTS, COMMUNICATION 6 Mathematical Schools, Communities, and Networks 113 DAVID E. ROWE Texts and Contexts 114 Shifting Modes of Production and Communication 117 Mathematical Research Schools in Germany 120 Other National Traditions 123 Göttingens Modern Mathematical Community 127 Pure and Applied Mathematics in the Cold War Era and Beyond 129 7 The Industry, Research, and Education Nexus 13 3 TERRY SHINN Germany as a Paradigm of Heterogeneity 134 France as a Paradigm of Homogeneity 138 England as a Case of Underdetermination 143 The United States as a Case of Polymorphism 147 The Stone of Sisyphus 15 2 8 Remaking Astronomy: Instruments and Practice in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centimes 15 4 ROBERT W. SMITH The Astronomy of Position 154 Different Goals 160 Opening Up the Electromagnetic Spectrum 16 5 Into Space 167 Very Big Science 17° 9 Languages in Chemistry 174 BERNADETTE BENSAUDE VINCENT 1787: A Mirror of Nature to Plan the Future 176 1860: Conventions to Pacify the Chemical Community I 8 I 1930: Pragmatic Rules to Order Chaos 18 6 Toward a Pragmatic Wisdom 189 10 Imagery and Representation in Twentieth Century Physics 19 1 ARTHUR I. MILLER The Twentieth Century * 9 3 Albert Einstein: Thought Experiments 19 4 Types of Visual Images : 9 5 Atomic Physics during 1913 1925: Visualization Lost 19 7 Atomic Physics during 1925 1926: Visualization versus Visualizability 2O° x Contents Atomic Physics in 1927: Visualizability Redefined 203 Nuclear Physics: A Clue to the New Visualizability 205 Physicists Rerepresent 208 The Deep Structure of Data 2.09 Visual Imagery and the History of Scientific Thought 212 PART III. CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS: PROBLEMS THROUGH THE EARLY 1900s 11 The Physical Sciences in the Life Sciences 219 FREDERIC L. HOLMES Applications of the Physical Sciences to Biology in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries 221 Chemistry and Digestion in the Eighteenth Century 224 Nineteenth Century Investigations of Digestion and Circulation 226 Transformations in Investigations of Respiration 230 Physiology and Animal Electricity 233 12. Chemical Atomism and Chemical Classification 237 HANS WERNER SCHUTT Chemical versus Physical Atoms 238 Atoms and Gases 239 Calculating Atomic Weights 241 Early Attempts at Classification 243 Types and Structures 245 Isomers and Stereochemistry 248 Formulas and Models 250 The Periodic System and Standardization in Chemistry 251 Two Types of Bonds 254 13 The Theory of Chemical Structure and Its Applications 255 ALAN J. ROCKE Early Structuralist Notions 255 Electrochemical Dualism and Organic Radicals 257 Theories of Chemical Types 259 The Emergence of Valence and Structure 262 Further Development of Structural Ideas 265 Applications of the Structure Theory 269 14 Theories and Experiments on Radiation from Thomas Young to X Rays 272 SUNGOOK HONG The Rise of the Wave Theory of Light 272 New Kinds of Radiation and the Idea of the Continuous Spectrum 277 The Development of Spectroscopy and Spectrum Analysis 280 Contents xi The Electromagnetic Theory of Light and the Discovery of X Rays 284 Theory, Experiment, Instruments in Optics 287 1$ Force, Energy, and Thermodynamics 289 CROSBIE SMITH The Mechanical Value of Heat 290 A Science of Energy 296 The Energy of the Electromagnetic Field 304 Recasting Energy Physics 308 16 Electrical Theory and Practice in the Nineteenth Century 311 BRUCE J. HUNT Early Currents 311 The Age of Faraday and Weber 312 Telegraphs and Cables 314 Maxwell 317 Cables, Dynamos, and Light Bulbs 319 The Maxwellians 321 Electrons, Ether, and Relativity 32.4 PART IV. ATOMIC AND MOLECULAR SCIENCES IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY 17 Quantum Theory and Atomic Structure, 1900 1927 3 31 OLIVIER DARRIGOL The Quantum of Action 3 3 2 Quantum Discontinuity 334 From Early Atomic Models to the Bohr Atom 3 3 6 Einstein and Sommerfeld on Bohr s Theory 339 Bohr s Correspondence Principle versus Munich Models 340 A Crisis, and Quantum Mechanics 3 4J Quantum Gas, Radiation, and Wave Mechanics 344 The Final Synthesis 34^ 18 Radioactivity and Nudear Physics 3 5 o JEFF HUGHES Radioactivity and the Political Economy of Radium 352 Institutionalization, Concentration, and Specialization: The Emergence of a Discipline, 1905 1914 3 5 5 An Obscure Oddity ? Radioactivity Reconstituted, 1919 1925 360 Instruments, Techniques, and Disciplines: Controversy, 1924 1932 362 From Radioactivity to Nuclear Physics : A Discipline Transformed, 1932 1940 3°° Nuclear Physics and Partide Physics: Postwar Differentiation, 1945 1960 37° xü Contents 19 Quantum Field Theory: From QED to die Standard Model 375 SILVAN S. SCHWEBER Quantum Field Theory in the 1930s 377 From Pions to the Standard Model: Conceptual Developments in Particle Physics 3^2. Quarks 3 8 8 Gauge Theories and the Standard Model 3 9 J 20 Chemical Physics and Quantum Chemistry in the Twentieth Century 394 ANA SIMÖES Periods and Concepts in the History of Quantum Chemistry 3 9 5 The Emergence of Quantum Chemistry and the Problem of Reductionism 4°° The Emergence of Quantum Chemistry in National Context 4°4 Quantum Chemistry as a Discipline 4°7 The Uses of Quantum Chemistry for the History and Philosophy of the Sciences 411 21 Plasmas and Solid State Science 413 MICHAEL ECKERT Prehistory: Contextual versus Conceptual 4*4 World War II: A Critical Change 417 Formative Years, 1945 1960 420 Consolidation and Ramifications 425 Models of Scientific Growth 427 22 Macromolecules: Their Structures and Functions 429 YASU FURUKAWA From Organic Chemistry to Macromolecules 430 Physicalizing Macromolecules 435 Exploring Biological Macromolecules 437 The Structure of Proteins: The Mark Connection 440 The Path to the Double Helix: The Signer Connection 443 PART V. MATHEMATICS, ASTRONOMY, AND COSMOLOGY SINCE THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY 23 The Geometrical Tradition: Mathematics, Space, and Reason in the Nineteenth Century 449 JOAN L. RICHARDS The Eighteenth Century Background 450 Geometry and the French Revolution 454 Geometry and the German University 458 Contents xiii Geometry and English Liberal Education 460 Euclidean and Non Euclidean Geometry 462 Geometry in Transition: 1850 1900 464 24 Between Rigor and Applications: Developments in the Concept of Function in Mathematical Analysis 468 JESPER LÜTZEN Euler s Concept of Function 469 New Function Concepts Dictated by Physics 470 Dirichlet s Concept of Function 471 Exit the Generality of Algebra Enter Rigor 474 The Dreadful Generality of Functions 477 The Delta Function 479 Generalized Solutions to Differential Equations 481 Distributions: Functional Analysis Enters 4^4 25 Statistics and Physical Theories 488 THEODORE M. PORTER Statistical Thinking 4^9 Laws of Error and Variation 4 9l Mechanical Law and Human Freedom 494 Regularity, Average, and Ensemble 49 8 Reversibility, Recurrence, and the Direction of Time 500 Chance at the Fin de Siecle 5 ° 3 26 Solar Science and Astrophysik 5 ° 5 JOANN EISBERG Solar Physics: Early Phenomenology 5 ° 8 Astronomical Spectroscopy 5l ° Theoretical Approaches to Solar Modeling: Thermodynamics and the Nebular Hypothesis 5 : 2 Stellar Spectroscopy 5 l 4 From the Old Astronomy to the New 5l 6 Twentieth Century Stellar Models 51 8 27 Cosmologies and Cosmogonies of Space and Time 52 2 HELGE KRAGH The Nineteenth Century Heritage 5 2 2 Galaxies and Nebulae until 1925 5 2 3 Cosmology Transformed: General Relativity 5 2 5 An Expanding Universe 5 2 « Nonrelativistic Cosmologies 5 2 9 Gamow s Big Bang 53° The Steady State Challenge 5 3 x Radio Astronomy and Other Observations 5 3 2 A New Cosmological Paradigm 5 3 3 Developments since 1970 5 3 4 xiv Contents 28 The Physics and Chemistry of the Earth 5 3 8 NAOMI ORESKES AND RONALD E. DOEL Traditions and Conflict in the Study of the Earth 5 3 9 Geology, Geophysics, and Continental Drift 542 The Depersonalization of Geology 545 The Emergence of Modern Earth Science 549 Epistemic and Institutional Reinforcement 5 5 2 PART VI. PROBLEMS AND PROMISES AT THE END OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY 29 Science, Technology, and War 5 61 ALEX ROLAND Patronage 5 * 2 Institutions 5^6 Qualitative Improvements 5^8 Large Scale, Dependable, Standardized Production 5 6 9 Education and Training 57° Secrecy 5 7J Political Coalitions 573 Opportunity Costs 574 Dual Use Technologies 57 5 Moraliry 577 30 Science, Ideology, and the State: Physics in the Twentieth Century 579 PAUL JOSEPHSON Soviet Marxism and the New Physics 580 Aryan Physics and Nazi Ideology 586 Science and Pluralist Ideology: The American Case 589 The Ideological Significance of Big Science and Technology 5 91 The National Laboratory as Locus of Ideology and Knowledge 594 31 Computer Science and the Computer Revolution 598 WILLIAM ASPRAY Computing before 1945 598 Designing Computing Systems for the Cold War 601 Business Strategies and Computer Markets 604 Computing as a Science and a Profession 607 Other Aspects of the Computer Revolution 611 32 The Physical Sciences and the Physician s Eye: Dissolving Disciplinary Boundaries 615 BETTYANN HOLTZMANN KEVLES Origins of CT in Academic and Medical Disciplines 617 Origins of CT in Private Industry 621 Contents xv From Nuclear Magnetic Resonance to Magnetic Resonance Imaging 625 MRI and the Marketplace 629 The Future of Medical Imaging 631 33 Global Environmental Change and the History of Science 634 JAMES RODGER FLEMING Enlightenment 636 Literary and Scientific Transformation: The American Case 638 Scientific Theories of Climatic Change 641 Global Warming: Early Scientific Work and Public Concern 645 Global Cooling, Global Warming 648 Index 651 ILLUSTRATIONS 8.1 The Dorpat Refractor, a masterpiece by Fraunhofer page 15 7 8.2 The Leviathan of Parsonstown 1 J 8.3 The Hubble Space Telescope in the payload bay of the Space Shuttle Enterprise J 7J 10.1 An Aristotelian representation of a cannonball s trajectory 19 2 10.2 Galileos 1608 drawingof the parabolic fall of an object 192 10.3 Representations of the atom according to Niels Bohr s 1913 atomic theory 19 ° 10.4 The difference between visualization and visualizability 206 10.5 Representations of the Coulomb force 2°8 10.6 Representations ofthe atom and its interactions with light 210 10.7 Bubble chamber and deep structure 21 r 10.8 Images of data and their deep structure 2 J 3 10.9 Representations ofthe atom 2I4
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title_auth The Cambridge history of science
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title_full The Cambridge history of science 5 The modern physical and mathematical sciences general ed.: David C. Lindberg ...
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title_short The Cambridge history of science
title_sort the cambridge history of science the modern physical and mathematical sciences
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