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The Story of Western Science

Page 34

by Susan Wise Bauer


  legacy of, 13–14, 26

  role of gods for, 12–13

  universe according to, 12–15

  Platonic tradition, 24, 41, 229

  Playfair, John, 116, 117, 119, 125

  Pliny, 107

  pluralists, 12

  Plutarch, 9

  pneuma (air), 66

  pneumoccal viruses, 193–94

  Poincaré, Henri, 227–28, 253

  Politics (Aristotle), 26–27

  polysaccharide, 193

  population genetics, 200–203

  pores, 66–69

  postulates, 27

  predictability, 253–54

  “Predictability: Does the Flap of A Butterfly’s Wings in Brazil Set Off a Tornado in Texas?” (Lorenz), 255

  “Preliminary Discourse” (Cuvier), 103, 115, 124, 126–27

  “Preliminary Discourse to a Dissertation on a Solid Body Naturally Contained within a Solid” (Steno), 106–8

  “Present Situation in Quantum Mechanics, The” (Schrödinger), 235

  pressure, 84, 89, 239

  Price, George Robert, 202

  Price’s Equation, 202–3

  Priestley, Joseph, 226

  Princeton University, 151, 247

  Principe, Lawrence, 92–93

  Principia, see Philosophiae naturalis principia mathematica

  Principles of Geology, Being an Attempt to Explain the Former Changes of the Earth’s Surface, by Reference to Causes Now in Operation (Lyell), 103, 128, 131–33, 134–35, 168

  printing press, 44, 50, 78

  prisms, 95

  Proclus, 27

  Project Gutenberg, 93

  proteins, 187–88, 194, 196–97

  Protestants, 116

  protoplasm, 186

  Prussia, 157–58

  psychology, psychologists, 204–6, 209

  evolutionary, 207

  Ptolomy, 1, 37, 39–45, 65

  orbital scheme of, 39–41, 40, 45, 46–49, 55–56, 74

  Ptolemy I, king of Egypt, 27

  Pulitzer Prize, 208

  punctuated equilibrium, 208

  Pythagoras, Pythagoreans, 22–24, 26–27, 81

  Pythagorean theorem, 23–24, 23

  Pythocles, 33

  quadrivium, 42

  quantum, quanta, 230, 244, 245

  Quantum Enigma: Physics Encounters Consciousness (Rosenblum and Kuttenr), 230n

  quantum jumps, 225, 230–35

  quantum mechanics, 151, 225, 231, 252

  quantum theory, xx, 225–37, 238, 244

  Quarterly Review, 129

  radiation, 192

  blackbody, 230

  microwave, 246–47

  radioactive dating, 137–39, 141–42, 151, 228–29

  radioactivity, 136–39

  rational numbers, 22

  ratios, 22, 24, 29

  Read, Andrew, 203

  Realm of the Nebulae, The (Hubble), 213, 238, 241, 250–51

  reason:

  divine revelation vs., 76

  experimental method and, 94–102, 135

  senses and, 93

  as substitute for observation, 9–10

  technological helps in, 91–92

  truth gained by, 26, 35, 57–58, 130

  recessive characteristics, 175

  Recherches sur les ossemens fossiles de quadrupèdes (Cuvier), 123

  rectangle, 22

  redshift, 239, 241–43

  reductionism, disciplinary, 204

  Regiomontanus (Johann Muller), 44–45

  Reid, Harry Fielding, 144

  principle of, 221

  Relativity: The Special and General Theory (Einstein), 213, 215, 224

  relativity theory, 151, 215–24, 238, 239

  Einstein’s railway car analogy for, 221–22, 222

  general, 223–24, 238, 242, 243

  special, 221–24

  religion:

  science and, 24, 49–51, 75–79, 80, 82, 109–10, 118–19, 120, 128, 134, 179–80, 183, 209

  sociobiological basis for, 207

  Rensch, Bernhard, 183

  replication, 194, 196

  reproduction, as essential to human beings, 169

  Republic (Plato), 25

  retrogradations (planetary), 38

  “Revolutions of the Globe” (Cuvier), see “Preliminary Discourse”

  Rheticus, 49, 51

  ribonucleic acid (RNA), 196–97

  Riccardi, Niccolo, 78

  Riemann, Bernhard, 219–20, 223, 224

  Rigden, John S., 227n

  rivers, erosion by, 130

  RNA (ribonucleic acid), 196–97

  Rockefeller Institute, 188, 193

  rocks:

  and the age of the earth, 106

  in Channeled Scablands, 149–51

  dating of, 138

  fossils in, see fossils, fossilization

  iridium in, 151

  sedimentary, 123, 129

  and Steno’s principles, 107-8

  Roentgen, Wilhelm, 136, 192

  Roman Empire, 34, 42, 64, 107

  Rome, Italy, 79, 89

  Rosenblum, Bruce, 230n

  Rostand, Jean, 181

  Royal Botanical Gardens, 171

  Royal College of Science, 137

  Royal College of Surgeons, 63

  Royal Horticultural Society of England, 177

  Royal Horticultural Society of London, 178

  Royal Society of Edinburgh, 117–19

  Royal Society of London, 120

  dedicatory epistle of, 60–61

  founding of, 60, 88

  Hooke as curator of experiments at, 87–91, 94–96

  Newton’s conflict with, 94–96, 99–100

  Rudwick, Martin J. S., 126

  “Rules for the Study of Natural Philosophy” (Newton), 99–102

  Russia, 157, 180, 182, 190, 243, 246

  Rutherford, Ernest, 137–39, 192, 228–30

  atomic model of, 229–30, 229, 231

  sal ammoniac, 115

  salt, 85, 157

  sand, symbolic meaning of, 31

  “Sand-Reckoner” (Archimedes), 1, 21, 27, 29, 31, 48

  Sanger, Frederick, 197

  Sarton, George, 17–18

  Saturn, 47

  “saving the phenomena,” 38, 49, 76, 231

  scala naturae (Scale of Nature), 18–19

  Sceptical Chymist, The (Boyle), 53, 80, 86–87, 92–93

  Scheideck, Greenland, 146

  Scheiner, Christoph, 81

  Schindewolf, Otto, 180

  Schleiden, Jakob, 186

  Schrödinger, Erwin, 213, 225, 232–37, 252

  Schrödinger’s cat, 235–37

  Schuchert, Charles, 144

  Schultz, Max, 186

  Schumacher, Heinrich, 218

  Schwann, Theodor, 186

  Sciama, Dennis, 247

  science:

  ascendancy of, 56

  beginnings, 1–52

  current, 17, 154, 184, 209

  divine vs. natural factors in, 3–7, 9, 12–14, 27

  eclipse and rebuilding of interest in, 41–45

  history of, xvii–xviii, xx, 18, 252–54

  limits of, 252–56

  obstacles to progress in, 24

  origins of, xviii

  in popular culture, 154, 181, 256

  specialization of, xix

  Science, 152

  science fiction, 154, 181, 256

  Science of Life, The (Huxley), 182

  scientific method, xviii, 53–102

  demonstration in, 63–69

  earliest articulation of, 55–62

  use of technological helps in, 80–93

  see also experimental method

  scientific texts:

  ancient, 3–8

  as obscure and inaccessible to lay readers, xix, 13–15, 93, 99, 119, 125, 180, 236, 250–51

  preserved by Arabs, 43

  as readable and accessible to lay readers, xix, 14–15, 20, 36
, 45, 51, 99–100, 114, 154, 172–73, 182–84, 203, 208, 224, 230n, 241n, 245, 246n, 248, 250–51, 252, 255–56

  seminal, vii–viii, xviii–xx, 256

  as summaries and studies rather than originals, 11, 22–23, 32, 34, 42–44

  see also specific writings

  Scopes trial, 180

  Scotland, Scots, 115, 128, 129, 157

  sea urchins, 177–78

  Selfish Gene, The (Dawkins), xix, 155, 199, 203, 210

  senses:

  divine revelation vs., 76

  enjoyment of, 34

  extended by technology, 80–93, 94, 146

  limitations of, 224

  reason and, 93

  universe perceived through, 13–14, 26

  serpents, 5–6

  Seven Years’ War, 157n

  sex:

  biological impulse as basis for, 207, 209

  chromosomes in determination of, 189, 202

  as essential human drive, 169

  in inheritance, 174–75

  sex-linked characteristics, 190–91

  Sextus Empiricus, 11

  Shapley, Harlow, 240–41

  shark’s teeth, 107

  ship shaker, 29

  Shropshire, England, 166

  Siberia, 120–21

  Sicily, 130

  Sidereal Messenger, The (Galileo), 74, 76

  Silberstein, L., 237

  silting, 142

  silver, 85

  Silverthorn, Michael, 61–62

  “Simple Mathematical Models with Very Complicated Dynamics” (May), 255

  Simplicius of Cilicia, 11

  Simpson, George Gaylord, 183

  singularity, 243–50, 252

  Sirius, 4, 218

  Sixtus IV, Pope, 64

  Smellie, William, 113, 114

  social sciences, biological impulse as basis for, 204–6

  sociobiology, debate over, 205–10

  Sociobiology: The New Synthesis (E. O. Wilson), 203, 205–7, 209

  Sociobiology Study Group, 206

  sociology, 204, 205

  Socrates, 9, 12n

  Soddy, Frederick, 137–38

  sodium, 136

  solar system:

  beginning and end of, 135

  controversy over, 76-79, 81

  first proposed, 29, 47-51

  function of, 215–17

  as metaphor for atom, 228–29, 231

  sonar technology, 146

  soul, 41

  in afterlife, 64

  as mortal, 34–35, 64

  sound waves, 218

  South America, 142, 167, 170

  space:

  beginning of, 244

  curvature of, 220, 223, 225, 239, 243

  Einstein on, 221–23

  as relative vs. absolute, 215–16

  subatomic, 233

  see also cosmos; universe

  space program, 151

  space-time, 215, 223, 225, 239, 243

  Spain, 43, 157, 190

  species:

  attempts to define and classify, 164–70

  extinction of, 120–24, 152, 153

  as mutable, 168, 170, 171, 174–78

  spectacles, 73

  Spedding, James, 61–62

  Spencer, Herbert, 172

  spheres, curvature of, 218–19

  Sprat, Thomas, 88

  stadia, 30

  standing wave, 234

  Stanford University, 192

  starlight:

  bending of, 223–24, 226–27, 238

  wavelength changes in, 239

  stars:

  catastrophes in, 154

  discovery of new, 55

  measurement of distance to, 241

  motion of, 51, 218, 239

  science of, 106

  viewed through telescope, 73, 218, 239–40

  stasis, 217–18

  stations (planetary), 38

  steady-state theory, 131, 246–48

  stem cells, xviii

  Steno, Nicholas, 106–8, 120

  Steno’s Principles, 107–8

  Stevens, Nettie, 189

  Stoney, George, 226

  strata:

  in determining age of earth, 108, 122

  in formation of earth, 117–18

  fossils in, 122

  in Paris, 123–24

  subatomic theory, 226–35

  submarines, 146

  Suess, Eduard, 141

  sulfur, 84–86

  Sullivan, Woodruff, 247

  sun:

  age of, 136

  as center of universe, see heliocentric model

  energy and, 135

  flares, 154

  origin of, 217

  redshift in light from, 239

  starlight bent by, 223–24, 226–27, 238

  supernovas, 55, 154

  Superposition, Steno’s Principle of, 107–8

  “survival of the fittest”:

  origin of phrase, 172

  as preservation of DNA, 200–203

  see also natural selection

  Sutton, Walter, 178

  Sweden, Swedish, 187

  sweet peas, 174–77

  Switzerland, Swiss, 116, 188

  Symposium (Xenophon), 4

  synthesis, the modern 179–84

  Syracuse, Sicily, 27

  Systema naturae (Linneaus), 159, 165–66

  Systematics and the Origin of Species, from the Viewpoint of a Zoologist (Mayr), 183

  Système des animaux sans vertèbres (Lamarck), 159

  System of the World, The (Laplace), 217

  systolic action, 66

  Tahiti, 167

  Taliaferro, R. Catesby, 45

  Tannstetter, Georg, 44–45

  Tatum, Edward, 192–93

  taxonomy, 19, 166, 184

  technology:

  advancements in, 80–93, 94, 177, 180, 186, 218, 233, 240, 248, 254

  evolved through war, 148–49

  truths revealed through, 90–92

  see also specific inventions

  teleology, 18

  telescopes:

  advancements in, 73, 81, 94, 218, 240

  observation and evidence from, 73–78, 81, 91, 97, 243

  Tempo and Mode in Evolution (Simpson), 183

  tetractys, 23

  Teutoburg Forest, 158

  Thales, 4–6, 10, 11, 32

  mathematical laws of, 21–22

  “Thales’s Leap,” 5

  Theatrum insectorum (Moufet), 165

  theology, 106, 108, 112, 117, 120, 134, 179–80

  Theories of the Universe: From Babylonian Myth to Modern Science (Munitz, ed.), 251

  theory:

  first known, 4–5

  technological advancements in development of, 91–92

  untestable and unprovable, 11, 21, 35, 50–51, 55, 67, 101, 108, 145, 162, 194, 197, 226, 227, 228, 241, 245–46

  use of term, xx

  see also specific theories

  Theory of the Earth (Hutton), 103, 115, 119, 125–26, 132

  thermal contraction theory, 141–42, 144

  Thermodynamics, Second Law of, 135–36, 139

  thinning universe, 244

  Thomas Aquinas, Saint, 75

  Thomson, Joseph, 226, 228–29

  thorium, 136

  Three Copernican Treatises, 51

  tides, 77–78, 129

  Timaeus (Plato), 1, 9, 12–15, 18

  reading sources for, 14–15

  time:

  as absolute, 215–16

  beginning of, 244

  “deep,” 113, 118–19, 125, 126, 137

  as measured by earth years, 110, 118, 135

  as relative, 221–23, 225, 243

  subatomic, 233

  in theoretical prediction, 253–54

  Time Machine, The (Wells), 181

  Tocqueville, Alexis de, 180

  To Infinity and Beyond: A Cultural History of the Infinite (Maor), 218n

  Toledo, Arabic
library at, 43

  Toomer, G. J., 45

  topography, 105

  Tower of London, 60

  Treatise on Celestial Mechanics (Laplace), 217

  Trefil, James, 248

  T. Rex and the Crater of Doom (Alvarez), xix, 103, 149, 153–54, 255–56

  trivium, 42

  Tudge, Colin, 196–97

  Twain, Mark, 183

  Twenty Questions game, 166

  Two New Sciences (Galileo), 79

  uncertainty principle, 233

  uniformitarianism (uniformity principle), 118–21, 125, 134–36, 138–40, 150, 166, 169, 208

  applied to living things, 161

  vs. catastrophism, 161

  dismissal of, 152–53

  embracing of, 128–33, 152

  resurgence of, 141–48

  as term, 132

  universal gravitation, 217–18

  universe:

  beginning point of, 243, 249–50

  Big Bang theory of, xviii, xix, 245–48, 256

  continuous creation model of, 245

  divine creator of, 12–13, 16, 18, 216–17

  erroneous model of, 37, 48-49

  expansion of, 242–49

  experimental method applied to, 94–102

  farther reaches of, 217

  first big-picture accounts of, 9–15

  first mathematical measurement of, 21–31

  five types of matter composing, 37–38

  as four-dimensional, 219–20, 225

  geocentric, see geocentric model

  heliocentric, see heliocentric model

  as inexplicable, 243–44

  origin theories of, 10–12, 37–38, 106, 238–51

  as quantifiable and comprehensible, 31

  size of, 239

  speculation on the end of, 35, 238, 249

  as static, 215, 217, 239, 240

  thinning, 244

  see also cosmos

  Unmoved Mover, 18

  unpredictability, 255–56

  uranium salts, 136

  urea, 187

  use and disuse, principle of, 160, 169

  Ussher, James, 106, 109, 112, 125, 157, 166

  vacuum, 83, 222, 226

  Van Hise, Charles, 106

  variation, through inheritance, 174–78, 180

  Venice, Italy, 73

  Venus, 74, 78, 239

  vertebrates, 19

  Vesalius, Andreas, 64–65

  Vienna, University of, 44

  Vine, F. J., 147

  viruses, 193–94

  Vitruvius, 28

  Viviani, Vincenzo, 72

  vivisection, 67

  void, 32–36

  volcanoes, 142, 154

  Voyage of the Beagle, The (Journal and Remarks; Darwin), 168, 170

  Vries, Hugo de, 177

  Waldeyer, Wilhelm, 177

  Wallace, Alfred Russel, 132, 170–71

  Wallis, Charles Glenn, 52

  War of the Worlds, The (Wells), 181

  Washington, D.C., 145, 149

  Washington, George, 157

  watch mechanism, as analogy, 3

  water:

  acid and, 188n

  in composition of universe, 5

  displacement of, 28

  in healing, 6–7, 9

  movement of, 111

 

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