Book Reviews
- @venite I much recommend Simonyi Sr's incredible, Whole Earth Catalog style, talmudically intertextual A Cultural History of Physics. Here Freeman Dyson talks about it (with son George commenting) https://t.co/rfF3HOfF5M And here is an EXCERPT (we're so lucky) https://t.co/S6nVvk3jxfLink to Tweet
- Or the regal A Cultural History of Physics, also tamudically hypertextual, a pre-internet internet in its vast maps -- its entire topography of knowledge unique, brilliant, infinite...! MUST be reprinted. By Simony Sr. Read Freeman Dyson's introduction: https://t.co/rfF3HOfF5M https://t.co/o3yEF0zaWULink to Tweet
About Book
While the physical sciences are a continuously evolving source of technology and of understanding about our world, they have become so specialized and rely on so much prerequisite knowledge that for many people today the divide between the sciences and the humanities seems even greater than it was when C. P. Snow delivered his famous 1959 lecture, "The Two Cultures." In A Cultural History of Physics, Hungarian scientist and educator Károly Simonyi succeeds in bridging this chasm by describing the experimental methods and theoretical interpretations that created scientific knowledge, from ancient times to the present day, within the cultural environment in which it was formed. Unlike any other work of its kind, Simonyi’s seminal opus explores the interplay of science and the humanities to convey the wonder and excitement of scientific development throughout the ages. These pages contain an abundance of excerpts from original resources, a wide array of clear and straightforward explanations, and an astonishing wealth of insight, revealing the historical progress of science and inviting readers into a dialogue with the great scientific minds that shaped our current understanding of physics. Beautifully illustrated, accurate in its scientific content and broad in its historical and cultural perspective, this book will be a valuable reference for scholars and an inspiration to aspiring scientists and humanists who believe that science is an integral part of our culture.