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📚 The largest truly open library in human history. ⭐️ We mirror Sci-Hub and LibGen. We scrape and open-source Z-Lib, DuXiu, and more. 📈 46,813,396 books, 98,079,051 papers — preserved forever. Learn more…
📚 The largest truly open library in human history. ⭐️ We mirror Sci-Hub and LibGen. We scrape and open-source Z-Lib, DuXiu, and more. Learn more…
English [en], .epub, 🚀/lgli/zlib, 3.2MB, 📘 Book (non-fiction), lgli/Gillispie, Charles Coulston; Porter, Theodore M.; - The Edge of Objectivity (2016, PrincetonUP).epub
The Edge of Objectivity: An Essay in the History of Scientific Ideas (Princeton Science Library (Paperback))🔍
Gillispie, Charles Coulston; Porter, Theodore M.;🔍
description
Originally published in 1960, The Edge of Objectivity helped to establish the history of science as a full-fledged academic discipline. In the mid-1950s, a young professor at Princeton named Charles Gillispie began teaching Humanities 304, one of the first undergraduate courses offered anywhere in the world on the history of science. From Galileo's analysis of motion to theories of evolution and relativity, Gillispie introduces key concepts, individuals, and themes. The Edge of Objectivity arose out of this course. It must have been a lively class. The Edge of Objectivity is pointed, opinionated, and selective. Even at six hundred pages, the book is, as the title suggests, an essay. Gillispie is unafraid to rate Mendel higher than Darwin, Maxwell above Faraday. Full of wry turns of phrase, the book effectively captures people and places. And throughout the book, Gillispie pushes an argument. He views science as the progressive development of more objective, detached, mathematical ways of viewing the world, and he orchestrates his characters and ideas around this theme. This edition of Charles Coulston Gillispie's landmark book introduces a new generation of readers to his provocative and enlightening account of the advancement of scientific thought over the course of four centuries. Since the original publication of The Edge of Objectivity, historians of science have focused increasingly on the social context of science rather than its internal dynamics, and they have frequently viewed science more as a threatening instance of power than as an accumulation of knowledge. Nevertheless, Gillispie's book remains a sophisticated, fast-moving, idiosyncratic account of the development of scientific ideas over four hundred years, by one of the founding intellects in the history of science.Featuring a new foreword by Theodore Porter, who places the work in its intellectual context and the development of the field, this edition of The Edge of Objectivity is a monumental work by one of the founding intellects of the history of science.
Alternative author
Charles Coulston Gillispie, Theodore M. Porter
Alternative publisher
Princeton University, Department of Art & Archaeology
Alternative edition
Princeton science library, New paperback edition, Princeton, New Jersey, 2016
Alternative edition
Princeton University Press, [N.p.], 2016
Alternative edition
United States, United States of America
Alternative edition
Reprint, 2016-09-06
Alternative edition
November 1990
Alternative edition
1, 1992
metadata comments
lg2259467
Alternative description
Cover -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- CONTENTS -- PREFACE -- FOREWORD -- INTRODUCTION TO THE NEW PAPERBACK EDITION -- I. FULL CIRCLE -- II. ART, LIFE, AND EXPERIMENT -- III. THE NEW PHILOSOPHY -- IV. NEWTON WITH HIS PRISM AND SILENT FACE -- V. SCIENCE AND THE ENLIGHTENMENT -- VI. THE RATIONALIZATION OF MATTER -- VII. THE HISTORY OF NATURE -- VIII. BIOLOGY COMES OF AGE -- IX. EARLY ENERGETICS -- X. FIELD PHYSICS -- XI. EPILOGUE -- BIBLIOGRAPHIC ESSAY -- INDEX
Alternative description
Focusing on the social context of science rather than its internal dynamics, this book views science more as a threatening instance of power than as an accumulation of knowledge. It provides an account of the development of scientific ideas.
Alternative description
IN THE YEAR 1604, Galileo Galilei formulated a law of falling bodies in a letter to his friend, Paolo Sarpi.
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