Thinking about the Earth
A History of Ideas in Geology
David Oldroyd(Author)
Harvard University Press
Published on 1. November 1996
Book
Hardback
440 pages
978-0-674-88382-6 (ISBN)
Description
Not quite a history of geology, Thinking about the Earth is a history of the geological tradition of Western science. Beginning with a discussion of "organic" views of the earth in ancient cultures, David Oldroyd traverses such topics as "mechanical" and "historicist" views of the earth, map-work, chemical analyses of rocks and minerals, geomorphology, experimental petrology, seismology, theories of mountain building, and geochemistry. He brings us back to the idea that the earth may, in a sense, be regarded as a living entity, or at least that life is an essential feature of its behavior.
Oldroyd offers a broad-brush contribution to the history of ideas and theories about the earth, providing a general synthesis of what science-historians have written about the history of the earth sciences. He shows us that ideas about the earth have been changing constantly since the beginnings of geological science in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and indeed that ideas changed much more rapidly after the establishment of this science than in preceding centuries.
Thinking about the Earth does not assume previous knowledge of earth science. What it does require is an openness to the notion that an understanding of what geologists have to tell us today about the earth can be achieved by examining the evolving history of ideas in geology. This book will be of considerable interest to historians of science, historians of ideas, geologists, students of earth science, and general readers as well.
Oldroyd offers a broad-brush contribution to the history of ideas and theories about the earth, providing a general synthesis of what science-historians have written about the history of the earth sciences. He shows us that ideas about the earth have been changing constantly since the beginnings of geological science in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and indeed that ideas changed much more rapidly after the establishment of this science than in preceding centuries.
Thinking about the Earth does not assume previous knowledge of earth science. What it does require is an openness to the notion that an understanding of what geologists have to tell us today about the earth can be achieved by examining the evolving history of ideas in geology. This book will be of considerable interest to historians of science, historians of ideas, geologists, students of earth science, and general readers as well.
Reviews / Votes
Oldroyd's panorama is...huge. As the chapters unfold, he conducts us from the creation myths of the ancient world, through the ambitious seventeenth-century theories of the earth, and into the increasing sophistication of the nineteenth century with its national geological surveys, its seismological explorations of the Earth's interior, and its new-found beliefs in periodic desiccation, episodic glaciation and titanic denudation. Finally, we arrive at the present through a nicely concocted account of the evolution of plate-tectonic theory, and the whole delectable edifice is topped off--as might be expected of a chef from 'down under'--with a summary of the history of Warren Carey's ideas on the subject of an expanding Earth. Those familiar with Oldroyd's previous literary offerings might hope to find this new work well laced with philosophical liqueur. I can assure them that their palate will not here suffer disappointment...I found the book easy and enjoyable reading...The publication of Oldroyd's book is an important event. It is the most broadly significant English-language addition to the literature of the history of the Earth sciences since the appearance of the first edition of Geikie's work in 1897. Oldroyd's words deserve to be read--his conclusions deserve to be pondered--by all those desirous of insight into the nature of the geohistorical drama that, over the centuries, we have compiled both for human edification and for human entertainment. -- Gordon L. Herries Davies * Nature * Oldroyd has written a serious and scholarly book that runs through the entire history of major geological ideas...[He adds] new tidbits, details, and pieces of the older literature that have been overlooked (or not included) by Rudwick, Gould, and others. But these are the things that make history interesting, and insights on the history of geology are greatly enriched by this approach. The sections on mountain-building, seismology, and, especially, the Gaia hypothesis, however, are new to the history of geology. Because of this book, these subjects will now be added to the standard lists of topics that are required reading for the 'complete' geologist. * Choice * A comprehensive overview--more complete and more broadly philosophical than any other I know--of how peoples from prehistoric times to the present have tried to understand the earth on which we live. The book is well written, highly informative, and displays Oldroyd's muted but distinctly puckish sense of humor. -- Ursula B. Marvin, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for AstrophysicsMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge, Mass
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
27 line illustrations, 35 halftones, 5 tables
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 156 mm
Weight
739 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-674-88382-6 (9780674883826)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
David Oldroyd is Honorary Visiting Professor in the School of Science and Technology Studies, The University of New South Wales, Australia. His previous books include Darwinian Impacts, The Arch of Knowledge, and The Highlands Controversy.
Content
Illustrations Acknowledgments Glossary Introduction 1. A Mythical and Living World: Ideas about the Earth in Antiquity, the Middle Ages and the Renaissance 2. Mechanical Theories of the Earth and Physico-Theology 3. The Beginnings of Geological Science: Detachment from Cosmogony and Mineralogy 4. Thoughts on Heat, Fire and Water 5. The Earth Surveyed and Geological Mapped: the Territorial Imperative 6. Geological Time and the Tempo of Geological Change 7. Thoughts about Climate. Glaciation and Carving the Earth's Surface 8. The Making of Mountains and the Pulse of the Earth 9. Thinking about Rocks and their Formation: Magma, Migma and All That Stuff 10. Thinking with Instruments: Earthquakes, Early Seismology and the Earth's Hidden Interior 11. Movement of Poles and Continents, or Getting Bigger? 12. Some Grander Ways of Thinking 13. Some Concluding Thoughts Suggestions for Further Reading Notes Bibliography Index