
The World as We Know It
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Science is the basis of our assumptions about ourselves and our world, from ideas about our evolutionary past to our conceptions of the vast expanses of space and the smallest particles of matter. In this panoramic book, acclaimed historian of science Peter Dear uncovers the roots of such beliefs, revealing how they constitute a natural philosophy that has been developed and refined over the course of centuries-and how the world as we have come to know it was by no means inevitable.
In a sweeping, multifaceted narrative, Dear describes some of the most breathtaking accomplishments in the advance of human knowledge, such as Isaac Newton's laws of motion and gravitation, Carl Linnaeus's taxonomy, Antoine Lavoisier's new chemistry, Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, and Albert Einstein's theories of relativity. Challenging the notion that science is only about "making discoveries," he shows how our world has been formed by people, institutions, and cultural assumptions, giving rise to disciplines ranging from biology and astrophysics to electromagnetism and the social sciences.
Taking readers from the early eighteenth century to today, The World as We Know It reveals how our ideas about our place in the universe were bequeathed to us by individuals, cultures, and a curiosity that knows no bounds.
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Content
- Cover
- Contents
- Introduction: Natural Philosophy and the Sciences
- 1. Divine Order: Isaac Newton and Physico-Theology
- 2. Celestial Order and Universal Gravity
- 3. Mixed Mathematics and Probability
- 4. Inventories of Electricity
- 5. Organization: Living Things
- 6. Cleaning up Chemistry: The Classification of Matter
- 7. Laplace, Revolutionary Order, and the Invention of Mathematical Physics
- Entr'acte: Institutions and Pedagogy
- 8. Classification and Extinction: Cuvier and Natural History in the Early Nineteenth Century
- 9. Darwin's Taxonomy: Geology and the Organization of Life
- 10. Evolution and Scientific Naturalism
- 11. Thermodynamics and Modern Physics
- 12. Chance and Determinism: New Models of Science
- 13. Electromagnetism, Action at a Distance, and Aether
- 14. The Chemical Use of Atoms
- 15. Laboratories of the Heavens: Physics in the Observatory
- 16. New Modes of Natural Philosophy
- Conclusion. The World We Have Gained . . . and Lost
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
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