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English
Oxford University Press
22 August 2013
The Oxford Handbook of the History of Physics brings together cutting-edge writing by more than twenty leading authorities on the history of physics from the seventeenth century to the present day. By presenting a wide diversity of studies in a single volume, it provides authoritative introductions to scholarly contributions that have tended to be dispersed in journals and books not easily accessible to the general reader. While the core thread remains the theories and experimental practices of physics, the Handbook contains chapters on other dimensions that have their place in any rounded history. These include the role of lecturing and textbooks in the communication of knowledge, the contribution of instrument-makers and instrument-making companies in providing for the needs of both research and lecture demonstrations, and the growing importance of the many interfaces between academic physics, industry, and the military.

Edited by:   , ,
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 248mm,  Width: 181mm,  Spine: 55mm
Weight:   2g
ISBN:   9780199696253
ISBN 10:   019969625X
Series:   Oxford Handbooks
Pages:   956
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  A / AS level ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Jed Buchwald and Robert Fox: Introduction Part I: Physics and the New Science 1: John Heilbron: Was there a Scientific Revolution? 2: Noel Swerdlow: Galileo's Mechanics of Natural Motion and Projectiles 3: John Schuster: Cartesian Physics 4: Anthony Turner: Physics and the Instrument-Makers, 1550-1700 5: Eric Schliesser and Chris Smeenk: Newton's Principia 6: Alan Shapiro: Newton's Optics 7: Bertoloni Meli: Experimentation in the Physical Sciences of the 17th Century 8: Niccolò Guicciardini: Mathematics and the New Sciences Part II: The Long Eighteenth Century 9: Giuliano Pancaldi: The Physics of Imponderable Fluids 10: Larry Stewart: Physics on Show: Entertainment, Demonstration, and Research in the Eighteenth Century 11: Anita McConnell: Instruments and Instrument-Makers, 1700-1850 12: Sandro Caparrini, and Craig Fraser: Mechanics in the Eighteenth Century 13: Robert Fox: Laplace and the Physics of Short-Range Forces 14: Jed Buchwald: Electricity and Magnetism to Volta Part III: Fashioning the Discipline: from Natural Philosophy to Physics 15: Jed Buchwald: Optics in the Nineteenth Century 16: Hasok Chang: Thermal Physics and Thermodynamics 17: Crosbie Smith: Engineering Energy: Constructing a New Physics for Victorian Britain 18: Friedrich Steinle: Electromagnetism and Field Physics 19: Jed Buchwald: Electrodynamics from Thomson and Maxwell to Hertz 20: Paolo Brenni: From Workshop to Factory: The evolution of Instrument Making Industry, 1850-1930 21: Josep Simon: Physics Textbooks and Textbook Physics in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries 22: Iwan Morus: Physics and Medicine 23: Kathy Olesko: Physics and Metrology Part IV: Modern Physics 24: Graeme Gooday and Daniel Mitchell: Rethinking 'Classical Physics' 25: Olivier Darrigol and Jürgen Renn: The Emergence of Statistical Mechanics 26: Daniel Kennefick: Three and a Half Principles: The Origins of Modern Relativity Theory 27: Suman Seth: Quantum Physics 28: Terry Shinn: The Silicon Tide: Relations between Things Epistemic and Things of Function in the Semiconductor World 29: Helge Kragh: Physics and Cosmology

Jed Buchwald is Doris and Henry Dreyfuss Professor of History at the California Institute of Technology. Awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 1995 and a Killam Fellowship in 1990 (Canada), Buchwald was trained at Princeton (BA'71) and Harvard (MA and Ph.D '74.) From 1974 to 1992 he taught at, and then served as Director of, the University of Toronto's Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology. From 1992 to 2001 he was at MIT as Dibner Professor of the History of Science, where he also directed the Dibner Institute for the History of Science and Technology. Buchwald has authored or co-authored five books and edited eight volumes on the history of science and related matters, as well as about seventy articles. Robert Fox read physics at Oxford (BA 1961) and then took a doctorate in the history of science, also at Oxford (DPhil 1967). He taught in the Department of History of the University of Lancaster from 1966, being awarded a personal chair in the history of science there in 1987. After a brief period as Assistant Director and Head of the Research and Information Services Division in the Science Museum, London, he was appointed to the chair of the history of science at the University of Oxford in 1988. Since retiring from the Oxford chair in 2006, he has held visiting professorships in the USA, at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD (2007) and East Carolina University, Greenville, NC (2009), and the Czech Republic, at the Czech National University of Technology (2010). He has served as President of the Division of History of Science of the International Union of History and Philosophy of Science (1993-7) and of the IUHPS (1995-7).

Reviews for The Oxford Handbook of the History of Physics

This excellent book points out connections between instruments, observations, theories and discoveries, as well as communication among physicists. [] The book is replete with key references, clear figures and name and subject indexes. * Optics and Photonics News, * Over the last thirty years, historians of physics have reexamined and rethought almost every aspect of their subject. The time is clearly ripe for a fresh overview of the field, and Jed Z. Buchwald and Robert Fox have assembled a first rate group of scholars to provide just that. Their Handbook is filled with sharp insights on everything from Galileo's experimental practices to the role quantum physics played in the making of Silicon Valley. It will prove indispensible to anyone seeking to understand how physics has grown and shaped our view of the world over the past four centuries. * Bruce J. Hunt, University of Texas * What a wonderful book! From 1600 to the present day, we are led through the history of physics in its many guises. We see the strange and recalcitrant phenomena, the inventive development of instrumentation and experiments, the arcane intricacy of theory, and the pervasive social, cultural and economic influences and consequences of physics. Anyone interested in the history of science will delight in this book. So will any physicist, and any philosopher of science. * Jeremy Butterfield, Trinity College, University of Cambridge *


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