A History of Scientific IdeasBarnes and Noble Books, 1996 - 525 стор. "Science, as Charles Singer points out in his preface, having come to control and direct industry, is now rapidly and manifestly transforming the very face of the earth and the lot of its living inhabitants, whether human, animal, or plant. What is the story behind this immense increase in scientific activity? Has science always been so powerful? And what does 'science' mean? Dr. Singer answers these questions by presenting a history of science--its developments, its protagonists, and the philosophy behind it. From the Stone Age to the twentieth century, from Ancient Egypt to modern Europe, from astrology to microbiology, this is the complex and extraordinary story of man's curiosity."--Jacket |
З цієї книги
Результати 1-3 із 37
Сторінка 54
... heavenly bodies appear to circle round us , bodies on earth tend to fall or rise . Newton at the end of the seventeenth cen- tury succeeded in expressing the movements of the heavenly bodies in known and experimentally demonstrated ...
... heavenly bodies appear to circle round us , bodies on earth tend to fall or rise . Newton at the end of the seventeenth cen- tury succeeded in expressing the movements of the heavenly bodies in known and experimentally demonstrated ...
Сторінка 250
... bodies tend of their own nature to come to rest at a level which is natural for them . Accelera- tion , as we ... heavenly bodies . Galileo by introducing the idea of ac- celeration , and especially of acceleration as natural to falling ...
... bodies tend of their own nature to come to rest at a level which is natural for them . Accelera- tion , as we ... heavenly bodies . Galileo by introducing the idea of ac- celeration , and especially of acceleration as natural to falling ...
Сторінка 297
... heavenly bodies by means of the telescope . ( ii ) Dynamical astronomy , that is , the reduction to mathematical form of the movements of the heavenly bodies and the predic- tion , on a gravitational basis , of the movements of those bodies ...
... heavenly bodies by means of the telescope . ( ii ) Dynamical astronomy , that is , the reduction to mathematical form of the movements of the heavenly bodies and the predic- tion , on a gravitational basis , of the movements of those bodies ...
Зміст
INTRODUCTION Nature of the Scientific Process | 1 |
THE SECOND ADVENTURE Divorce of Science | 62 |
THE FAILURE OF INSPIRATION Science the Hand | 103 |
Авторські права | |
16 інших розділів не відображаються
Загальні терміни та фрази
activity Alexandria Alhazen Almagest ancient angles animals Arabic Archimedes Aristotelian Aristotle astrology astronomical atoms Averroës became biological called cells centre chemical chemistry Christian circle complete conception Descartes Diagram discovery doctrine early earth electric elements Eratosthenes ether experimental experiments force Galileo gases Greek heat heavenly bodies heavens Hipparchus Hippocrates of Chios History of Technology idea important influence investigation Islam Kepler knowledge known later Latin light lines living things magnetic mathematical matter measure mechanical medieval metal method microscopic Middle Ages modern molecules moon motion movement nature Neoplatonic Newton nineteenth century Notochord observations optical orbit organisms phenomena philosophical physical physiology plants Plato principle produced Ptolemy Pythagorean relation Rhazes Roman rotation scheme scientific seventeenth century showed solar soul species sphere stars structure substance temperature theory thought tion translated universe waves weight whole writings