The Cambridge History of Science
Volume 4. Eighteenth-Century Science
$45.99 (R)
Part of The Cambridge History of Science
- Editor: Roy Porter, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, University College London
- Date Published: February 2017
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781107559738
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This volume offers to general and specialist readers alike the fullest and most complete survey of the development of science in the eighteenth century. It is designed to be read as both a narrative and an interpretation, and also to be used as a work of reference. While prime attention is paid to Western science, space is also given to science in traditional cultures and to colonial science. The contributors, world leaders in their respective specialties, engage with current historiographical and methodological controversies and strike out positions of their own.
Read more- The first comprehensive survey of the history of eighteenth-century science produced during the last thirty years
- By far the fullest and most complete work of its kind
Reviews & endorsements
"This comprehensive work surveys the development of science during the Enlightenment, when European science extended the Scientific Revolution into new areas.... Those already familiar with the century in general will find the specific essays on individual sciences of particular interest... Recommended." Choice
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×Product details
- Date Published: February 2017
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781107559738
- length: 944 pages
- dimensions: 230 x 153 x 56 mm
- weight: 1.43kg
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
List of illustrations
Notes on contributors
General editors' preface
1. Introduction Roy Porter
Part I. Science in Society:
2. The legacy of the 'scientific revolution': Science and the enlightenment Peter Hans Reill
3. Science, the universities, and other public spaces: teaching science Lawrence Brockliss
4. Scientific institutions and the organization of science James McClellan III
5. Science and government Robert Fox
6. Exploring natural knowledge: science and the popular Mary Fissell and Roger Cooter
7. The image of the man of science Steven Shapin
8. The philosopher's beard: women and gender in science Londa Schiebinger
9. The prosopography of science William Clark
Part II. Disciplines:
10. Classifying the sciences Richard Yeo
11. The philosophy of science Rob Iliffe
12. Ideas of nature: natural philosophy John Gascoigne
13. Mathematics Craig Fraser
14. Astronomy and cosmology Curtis Wilson
15. Mechanics and experimental physics Rod Home
16. Chemistry Jan Golinski
17. The life sciences Shirley A. Roe
18. The earth sciences Rhoda Rappaport
19. The human sciences Richard Olson
20. The medical sciences Thomas H. Broman
21. Marginalized practices Patricia Fara
Part III. Special Themes:
22. Scientific instruments and their makers G. L'E. Turner
23. Print and public science Adrian Johns
24. Scientific illustration in the eighteenth century Brian Ford
25. Science, art and the representation of the natural world Charlotte Klonk
26. Science and voyages of discovery Rob Iliffe
Part IV. Non-Western Traditions:
27. Islam Emilie Savage-Smith
28. India Deepak Kumar
29. China Frank Dikötter
30. Japan Shigeru Nakayama
31. Latin America: from Baroque to Modern Colonial science Jorge Cañizares Esguerra
Part V. Ramifications and Impacts:
32. Science and religion John Hedley Brooke
33. Science, culture and the imagination: enlightenment configurations George S. Rousseau
34. Science, philosophy, and the mind Paul Wood
35. Global pillage: science, commerce and Empire Larry Stewart
36. Technological and industrial change: a comparative essay Ian Inkster
Index.
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