Genius

Home > Science > Genius > Page 67
Genius Page 67

by James Gleick


  James, William. 1917. Selected Papers on Philosophy. London: Dent.

  Jammer, Max. 1966. The Conceptual Development of Quantum Mechanics. New York: McGraw-Hill.

  ——. 1974. The Philosophy of Quantum Mechanics: The Interpretations of Quantum Mechanics in Historical Perspective. New York: Wiley and Sons.

  Jeans, Sir James. 1943. Physics and Philosophy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

  Jette, Eleanor. 1977. Inside Box 1663. Los Alamos, N.M.: Los Alamos Historical Society.

  Johnson, Charles W., and Jackson, Charles O. 1981. City Behind a Fence: Oak Ridge, Tennessee, 1942–1946. Knoxville: University of Tennessee.

  Jourdain, Philip E. B. 1913. The Principle of Least Action. Chicago: Open Court.

  Judson, Horace Freeland. 1979. The Eighth Day of Creation: The Makers of the Revolution in Biology. New York: Simon and Schuster.

  Jungk, Robert. 1956. Brighter Than a Thousand Suns. New York: Harcourt.

  Jungnickel, Christa; and McCormmach, Russell. 1986. The Now Mighty Theoretical Physics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  Kac, Mark. 1985. Enigmas of Chance. New York: Harper and Row.

  Kamen, M. D. 1985. Radiant Science, Dark Politics. Berkeley: University of California Press.

  Kargon, Robert H. 1977. “Temple to Science: Cooperative Research and the Birth of the California Institute of Technology.” Historical Studies in the Physical Sciences 8:3.

  Kazin, Alfred. 1951. A Walker in the City. New York: Harcourt, Brace.

  Kevles, Daniel. 1987. The Physicists: The History of a Scientific Community in Modern America. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.

  ——. 1990. “Cold War and Hot Physics: Science, Security, and the American State, 1945–56.” Historical Studies in the Physical Sciences 20:239.

  Klauder, John R., ed. 1972. Magic Without Magic: John Archibald Wheeler. San Francisco: W. H. Freeman.

  Kragh, Helge. 1989. Dirac: A Scientific Biography. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

  Kroll, Norman M., and Lamb, Willis E. 1949. “On the Self-Energy of a Bound Electron.” Physical Review 75:388.

  Kuhn, T. S. 1962. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  ——. 1977. The Essential Tension. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  ——. 1978. Black Body Theory and the Quantum Discontinuity, 1894–1912. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

  Kunetka, James W. 1979. City of Fire. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.

  Kursunoglu, Behram N., and Wigner, Eugene P. 1987. Reminiscences about a Great Physicist: Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

  La Belle, Jenijoy. 1989. “The Piper and the Physicist.” Engineering and Science, Fall, 25.

  LaFollette, Marcel C. 1990. Making Science Our Own: Public Images of Science 1910–1955. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  Lamb, Willis. 1980. “The Fine Structure of Hydrogen.” In Brown and Hoddeson 1983, 311.

  Landsberg, P. T., ed. 1982. The Enigma of Time. Bristol: Adam Hilger.

  Laurence, William L. 1959. Men and Atoms. New York: Simon and Schuster.

  Leighton, Ralph. 1991. Tuva or Bust! Richard Feynman’s Last Journey. New York: Norton.

  Lentricchia, Frank. 1980. After the New Criticism. Chicago: University of Chicago.

  Leplin, J., ed. 1984. Scientific Realism. Berkeley: University of California Press.

  Lewis, Gilbert N. 1930. “The Symmetry of Time in Physics.” In Landsberg 1982, 37.

  Lifshitz, Eugene M. 1958. “Superfluidity.” Scientific American, June, 30.

  Lindsay, Robert Bruce. 1940. General Physics for Students of Science. New York: Wiley and Sons.

  Lipset, Seymour Martin, and Ladd, Jr., Everett Carll. 1971. “Jewish Academics in the United States.” American Jewish Yearbook, 89.

  Lombroso, Cesare. 1891. The Man of Genius. London: Walter Scott.

  Lopes, J. Leite. 1988. “Richard Feynman in Brazil: Recollections.” Manuscript.

  Lopes, J. Leite, and Feynman, Richard. 1952. “On the Pseudoscalar Meson Theory of the Deuteron.” Symposium on New Research Techniques in Physics, 251.

  Macfarlane, Gwyn. 1984. Alexander Fleming: The Man and the Myth. London: Hogarth Press.

  Mach, Ernst. 1960. The Science of Mechanics: A Critical and Historical Account of Its Development. Translated by Thomas J. McCormack. Lasalle, Ill.: Open Court.

  Maddox, John. 1988. “The Death of Richard Feynman.” Nature 331:653.

  Mann, Thomas. 1927. The Magic Mountain. Translated by H. T. Lowe-Porter. New York: Modern Library.

  Marshak, Robert E. 1970. “The Rochester Conferences.” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, June.

  Masters, Dexter, and Way, Katharine, eds. 1946. One World or None: A Report to the Public on the Full Meaning of the Atomic Bomb. New York: McGraw-Hill.

  Maugham, W. Somerset. 1947. “Sanatorium.” In Creatures of Circumstance. London: Heinemann.

  Mead, Margaret. 1949. Male and Female: A Study of the Sexes in a Changing World. New York: Morrow.

  Medawar, Peter Brian. 1969. Induction and Intuition in Scientific Thought. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society.

  Mehra, Jagdish, ed. 1973. The Physicist’s Conception of Nature. Dordrecht: Reidel.

  Mehra, Jagdish. 1988. “My Last Encounter with Richard Feynman.” Talk at Department of Physics, Cornell University, 24 February.

  Melsen, Andrew G. van. 1952. From Atomos to Atom: The History of the Concept “Atom.” Translated by Henry J. Koren. Pittsburgh, Duquesne University Press.

  Mendenhall, C. E.; Eve, A. S,; Keys, D. A.; and Sutton, R. M. 1950. College Physics. Boston: Heath.

  Menge, Edward J. v. K. 1932. Jobs for the College Graduate in Science. New York: Bruce.

  Mermin, N. David. 1985. “Is the Moon There When Nobody Looks? Reality and the Quantum Theory.” Physics Today, April, 38.

  Merton, Robert K. 1961. “The Role of Genius in Scientific Advance.” New Scientist 259: 306. In Hudson 1970, 70.

  ——. 1973. The Sociology of Science: Theoretical and Empirical Investigations. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  Metropolis, Nicholas. 1990. “The Los Alamos Experience, 1943–1954.” In Nash 1990.

  Metropolis, Nicholas, and Nelson, E. C. 1982. “Early Computing at Los Alamos.” Annals of the History of Computing 4:348.

  Michels, Walter C. 1948. “Women in Physics.” Physics Today, December, 16.

  Miller, Arthur I. 1984. Imagery in Scientific Thought: Creating Twentieth-Century Physics. Boston: Birkhäuser.

  ——. 1985. “Werner Heisenberg and the Beginning of Nuclear Physics.” Physics Today, November, 60.

  Millikan, Robert Andrews. 1947. Electrons (+ and –) Protons, Photons, Neutrons, Mesotrons, and Cosmic Rays. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  Millikan, Robert Andrews; Roller, Duane; and Watson, Earnest Charles. 1937. Mechanics, Molecular Physics, Heat, and Sound. Boston: Ginn.

  Mizener, Arthur. 1949. The Far Side of Paradise. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.

  Morris, Richard. 1984. Time’s Arrows: Scientific Attitudes toward Time. New York: Simon and Schuster.

  Morrison, Philip. 1946. “If the Bomb Gets Out of Hand.” In Masters and Way 1946.

  ——. 1985. Review of Surely You’re Joking, Mr. Feynman! In Scientific American, May, 41.

  [Morrison, Philip.] 1988. “Richard P. Feynman 1918–1988.” Scientific American, June, 38.

  Morse, Philip. 1977. In at the Beginnings: A Physicist’s Life. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.

  Moss, Norman. 1987. Klaus Fuchs. London: Grafton.

  Murray, Francis J. 1961. Mathematical Machines. New York: Columbia University Press.

  Nash, Stephen G., ed. 1990. A History of Scientific Computing. New York: ACM.

  New Yorker. 1988. “Richard Feynman.” 14 March, 30.

  Nisbet, Robert. 1980. History of the Idea of Progress. New York: Basic Books.

  Noyes, H. P.; Hafner, E. M
.; Yekutieli, C; and Raz, B. J., eds. High Energy Nuclear Physics. Proceedings of the Fifth Annual Rochester Conference, 31 January–2 February. New York: Interscience.

  Nye, Mary Jo, ed. 1984. The Question of the Atom. Los Angeles: Tomash.

  Obler, Loraine K., and Fein, Deborah, eds. 1988. The Exceptional Brain: Neuropsy-chology of Talent and Special Abilities. New York: Guilford Press.

  Ochse, R. 1990. Before the Gates of Excellence: The Determinants of Creative Genius. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

  Oppenheimer, J. Robert. 1945. Speech to the Association of Los Alamos Scientists, 2 November. In Smith and Weiner 1980, 315.

  ——. 1948. “Electron Theory.” In Schwinger 1958.

  Osgood, Charles G., ed. 1947. The Modern Princeton. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

  Osgood, Charles G. 1951. Lights in Nassau Hall. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

  Pais, Abraham. 1982. “Subtle Is the Lord”: The Science and the Life of Albert Einstein. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  ——. 1986. Inward Bound. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  ——. 1991. Niels Bohr’s Times, in Physics, Philosophy, and Polity. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  Park, David. 1988. The How and the Why. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

  Peierls, Rudolf. 1985. Bird of Passage. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

  Perutz, Max. 1989. Is Science Necessary? Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  Pickering, Andrew. 1984. Constructing Quarks: A Sociological History of Particle Physics. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

  Polkinghorne, John C. 1980. Models of High Energy Processes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

  ——. 1989. Rochester Roundabout: The Story of High Energy Physics. New York: W. H. Freeman.

  ——. 1990. “Chaos and Cosmos: A Theological Approach.” Talk at Nobel Symposium, St. Peter, Minn.

  Pollard, Ernest C. 1982. Radiation: One Story of the MIT Radiation Laboratory. Durham, N.C.: Woodbum Press.

  Popper, Karl. 1958. The Logic of Scientific Discovery. London: Hutchinson.

  Presidential Commission on the Space Shuttle Challenger Accident. 1986. Report of the Presidential Commission on the Space Shuttle Challenger Accident. Washington, D.C.

  Princeton University. 1946. The Future of Nuclear Science. Princeton University Bicentennial Conferences: Series I, Conference I. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

  Putnam, Hilary. 1965. “A Philosopher Looks at Quantum Mechanics.” In Colodny 1965, 75.

  Quine, W. V. 1969. Ontological Relativity. New York: Columbia University Press.

  ——. 1987. Quiddities: An Intermittently Philosophical Dictionary. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press.

  Rabi, Isidor Isaac. 1970. Science: The Center of Culture. New York: World.

  Regis, Ed. 1987. Who Got Einstein’s Office?: Eccentricity and Genius at the Institute for Advanced Study. Reading, Mass.: Addison Wesley.

  ——. 1990. Great Mambo Chicken and the Transhuman Condition. Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley.

  Reichenbach, Hans. 1956. The Direction of Time. Berkeley: University of California Press.

  Reid, Hiram Alvin. 1895. History of Pasadena. Pasadena: Pasadena History Company.

  Reid, R. W. 1969. Tongues of Conscience: Weapons Research and the Scientists’ Dilemma. New York: Walker and Company.

  Reid, T. R. 1984. The Chip: How Two Americans Invented the Microchip and Launched a Revolution. New York: Simon and Schuster.

  Reingold, Nathan, and Reingold, Ida H., eds. 1981. Science in America: A Documentary History 1900–1919. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  Rhodes, Richard. 1987. The Making of the Atomic Bomb. New York: Simon and Schuster.

  Rigden, John S. 1987. Rabi: Scientist and Citizen. New York: Basic Books.

  Riordan, Michael. 1987. The Hunting of the Quark. New York: Simon and Schuster.

  Root-Bernstein, Robert Scott. 1989. Discovering: Inventing and Solving Problems at the Frontiers of Scientific Knowledge. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.

  Sakharov, Andrei. 1990. Memoirs. Translated by Richard Lourie. New York: Knopf.

  Salam, Abdus, and Strathdee, J. 1972. “The Path-Integral Quantization of Gravity.” In Aspects of Quantum Theory. Edited by Abdus Salam and E. P. Wigner. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

  Sanchez, George I. 1961. Arithmetic in Maya.

  Scheid, Ann. 1986. Pasadena: Crown of the Valley. Northridge, Calif.: Windsor.

  Schlossberg, David. 1988. Tuberculosis. Second edition. New York: Springer-Verlag.

  Schrödinger, Erwin. 1967. What Is Life? Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

  Schucking, Engelbert L. 1990. “Views from a Distant Past.” In General Relativity and Gravitation 1989. Edited by Neil Ashby. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

  Schwartz, Joseph. 1992. The Creative Moment: How Science Made Itself Alien to Modern Culture. New York: HarperCollins.

  Schweber, Silvan S. 1983. “A Short History of Shelter Island I.” In Jackiw et al. 1983, 301.

  ——. 1986a. “Feynman and the Visualization of Space-Time Processes.” Reviews of Modern Physics, 58:449.

  ——. 1986b. “The Empiricist Temper Regnant: Theoretical Physics in the United States 1920–1950.” Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences 17:1.

  ——. 1986c. “Shelter Island, Pocono, and Oldstone: The Emergence of American Quantum Electrodynamics after World War II.” Osiris 2:265.

  ——. 1989. “The Young Slater and the Development of Quantum Chemistry.” Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences 20:339

  ——. Forthcoming. QED: 1946–1950: An American Success Story. Manuscript.

  Schwinger, Julian. 1934. “On the Interaction of Several Electrons.” Typescript. Courtesy of Schwinger.

  ——, ed. 1958. Selected Papers on Quantum Electrodynamics. New York: Dover.

  ——. 1973. “A Report on Quantum Electrodynamics.” In Mehra 1973, 413.

  ——. 1983. “Renormalization Theory of Quantum Electrodynamics: An Individual View.” In Brown and Hoddeson 1983.

  ——. 1989. “A Path to Quantum Electrodynamics.” Physics Today, February, 42.

  Segrè, Emilio. 1970. Enrico Fermi: Physicist. Chicago: University of Chicago.

  ——. 1980. From X-Rays to Quarks: Modern Physicists and Their Discoveries. Berkeley, Calif.: W. H. Freeman.

  Sharpe, William. 1755. A Dissertation Upon Genius. Reprint, with introduction by William Bruce Johnson. Delmar, N.Y.: Scholars’ Facsimiles and Reprints, 1973.

  Sheppard, R. Z. 1985. “The Wonderful Wizard of Quark.” Time, 7 January, 91.

  Shryock, Richard Harrison. 1947. The Development of Modern Medicine. New York: Knopf.

  Shuttle Criticality Review Hazard Analysis Audit Committee. 1988. Post-Challenger Evaluation of Space Shuttle Risk Assessment and Management. Washington, D.C.: National Academy of Sciences Press.

  Silberman, Charles E. 1985. A Certain People: American Jews and Their Lives Today. New York: Summit.

  Simonton, Dean Keith. 1984. Genius, Creativity, and Leadership: Historiometric Inquiries. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.

  ——. 1989. Scientific Genius. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

  Sitwell, Edith. 1943. Street Songs. London: Macmillan.

  ——. 1987. Façade. London: Duckworth.

  Sklar, Lawrence. 1974. Space, Time, and Spacetime. Berkeley: University of California Press.

  Slater, John C. 1955. Modern Physics. New York: McGraw-Hill.

  ——. 1963. Quantum Theory of Molecules and Solids. Vol. 1. New York: McGraw-Hill.

  ——. 1975. Solid-State and Molecular Theory: A Scientific Biography. New York: Wiley and Sons.

  Slater, John C, and Frank, Nathaniel H. 1933. Introduction to Theoretical Physics. New York: McGraw-Hill.

  Smith, Alice Kimball. 1965. A Peril and a Hope: The Scientists’ Movement in America 1945–47. Chicago: University
of Chicago Press.

  Smith, Alice Kimball, and Weiner, Charles. 1980. Robert Oppenheimer: Letters and Reflections. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.

  Smith, Cyril Stanley. 1981. A Search for Structure. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.

  Smith, F. B. 1988. The Retreat of Tuberculosis 1850–1950. London: Croom Helm.

  Smyth, H. D. 1945. Atomic Energy for Military Purposes. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

  Smyth, H. D., and Wilson, Robert R. 1942. “The Isotron Method.” Isotron Report no. 18, 20 August. SMY.

  Snow, C. P. 1981. The Physicists. Boston: Little, Brown.

  Solomon, Saul. 1952. Tuberculosis. New York: Coward-McCann.

  Sopka, Katherine Russell. 1980. Quantum Physics in America: 1920–1935. New York: Arno Press.

  Stabler, Howard P. 1967. “Teaching from Feynman.” Physics Today, March, 47.

  Starr, Kevin. 1985. Inventing the Dream: California through the Progressive Era. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  Steinberg, Stephen. 1971. “How Jewish Quotas Began.” Commentary, September.

  Stigler, George. 1985. “Sex and the Single Physicist.” Wall Street Journal, 3 May, 21.

  Storch, Sylvia. 1966. “A Nobel-Prize Winner Comes Home.” Highpoints (Board of Education of the City of New York), June, 5.

  Stückelberg, E. C. G. 1941. “Remarque à propos de la Création de Paires de Particules en Théorie de Relativité.” Helvetica Physica Acta 14:588.

  Stuewer, Roger H. 1975. “G. N. Lewis on Detailed Balancing, the Symmetry of Time, and the Nature of Light.” Historical Studies in the Physical Sciences 6:469.

  Stuewer, Roger H., ed. 1979. Nuclear Physics in Retrospect: Proceedings of a Symposium on the 1930s. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

  Sudarshan, E. C. G. 1983. “Midcentury Adventures in Particle Physics.” In Brown et al. 1989, 40.

  Sudarshan, E. C. G, and Marshak, Robert E. 1984. “Origin of the V-A Theory.” Talk at International Conference on Fifty Years of Weak Interactions, Racine, Wis., 29 May–1 June.

  Sudarshan, E. C. G., and Ne’eman, Yuval, eds. 1973. The Past Decade in Particle Theory. London: Gordon and Breach.

  Sudarshan, E. C. G.; Tinlot, J. H.; and Melissinos, A. C., eds. 1960. Proceedings of the 1960 Annual International Conference on High Energy Physics at Rochester. 25 August–1 September. New York: Interscience.

 

‹ Prev