The Creation of Scientific Effects The Creation of Scientific Effects

The Creation of Scientific Effects

Heinrich Hertz and Electric Waves

    • USD 67.99
    • USD 67.99

Publisher Description

This book is an attempt to reconstitute the tacit knowledge—the shared, unwritten assumptions, values, and understandings—that shapes the work of science. Jed Z. Buchwald uses as his focus the social and intellectual world of nineteenth-century German physics.

Drawing on the lab notes, published papers, and unpublished manuscripts of Heinrich Hertz, Buchwald recreates Hertz’s 1887 invention of a device that produced electromagnetic waves in wires. The invention itself was serendipitous and the device was quickly transformed, but Hertz’s early experiments led to major innovations in electrodynamics. Buchwald explores the difficulty Hertz had in reconciling the theories of other physicists, including Hermann von Helmholtz and James Clerk Maxwell, and he considers the complex and often problematic connections between theory and experiment.

In this first detailed scientific biography of Hertz and his scientific community, Buchwald demonstrates that tacit knowledge can be recovered so that we can begin to identify the unspoken rules that govern scientific practice.

GENRE
Science & Nature
RELEASED
2011
15 January
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
496
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of Chicago Press
SELLER
Chicago Distribution Center
SIZE
5.8
MB
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