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Scientific journeys: a physicist explores the culture, history and personalities of science

This collection of essays traces a scientific journey bookmarked by remarkable mentors and milestones of science. It provides fascinating reading for everyone interested in the history, public appreciation, and value of science, as well as giving first-hand accounts of many key events and prominent...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Dylla, H Frederick
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Springer 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-55800-0
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2740550
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author Dylla, H Frederick
author_facet Dylla, H Frederick
author_sort Dylla, H Frederick
collection CERN
description This collection of essays traces a scientific journey bookmarked by remarkable mentors and milestones of science. It provides fascinating reading for everyone interested in the history, public appreciation, and value of science, as well as giving first-hand accounts of many key events and prominent figures. The author was one of the “sputnik kids” growing up in the US at the start of the space age. He built a working laser just two years after they were first invented, an experience that convinced him to become a physicist. During his 50-year career in physics, many personalities and notable events in science and technology helped to form his view of how science contributes to the modern world , including his conviction that the impact of science can be most effective when introduced within the context of the humanities - especially history, literature and the arts. From the Foreword by former U.S. Congressman, Rush D. Holt: In this volume, we have the wide-ranging thoughts and observations of Fred Dylla, an accomplished physicist with an engineer’s fascination for gadgets, a historian’s long perspective, an artist’s aesthetic eye, and a teacher’s passion for sharing ideas. Throughout his varied career [...] his curiosity has been his foremost characteristic and his ability to see the connection between apparently disparate things his greatest skill. [...] Here he examines the roots and growth of innovation in examples from Bell Laboratories, Edison Electric Light Company, and cubist painter Georges Braque. He considers the essential place of publishing in science, that epochal intellectual technique for learning how the world works. He shows the human enrichment and practical benefits that derive from wise investments in scientific research, as well as the waste resulting from a failure to embrace appropriate technologies.
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spelling cern-27405502021-04-21T16:45:46Zdoi:10.1007/978-3-030-55800-0http://cds.cern.ch/record/2740550engDylla, H FrederickScientific journeys: a physicist explores the culture, history and personalities of scienceScience in GeneralThis collection of essays traces a scientific journey bookmarked by remarkable mentors and milestones of science. It provides fascinating reading for everyone interested in the history, public appreciation, and value of science, as well as giving first-hand accounts of many key events and prominent figures. The author was one of the “sputnik kids” growing up in the US at the start of the space age. He built a working laser just two years after they were first invented, an experience that convinced him to become a physicist. During his 50-year career in physics, many personalities and notable events in science and technology helped to form his view of how science contributes to the modern world , including his conviction that the impact of science can be most effective when introduced within the context of the humanities - especially history, literature and the arts. From the Foreword by former U.S. Congressman, Rush D. Holt: In this volume, we have the wide-ranging thoughts and observations of Fred Dylla, an accomplished physicist with an engineer’s fascination for gadgets, a historian’s long perspective, an artist’s aesthetic eye, and a teacher’s passion for sharing ideas. Throughout his varied career [...] his curiosity has been his foremost characteristic and his ability to see the connection between apparently disparate things his greatest skill. [...] Here he examines the roots and growth of innovation in examples from Bell Laboratories, Edison Electric Light Company, and cubist painter Georges Braque. He considers the essential place of publishing in science, that epochal intellectual technique for learning how the world works. He shows the human enrichment and practical benefits that derive from wise investments in scientific research, as well as the waste resulting from a failure to embrace appropriate technologies.Springeroai:cds.cern.ch:27405502020
spellingShingle Science in General
Dylla, H Frederick
Scientific journeys: a physicist explores the culture, history and personalities of science
title Scientific journeys: a physicist explores the culture, history and personalities of science
title_full Scientific journeys: a physicist explores the culture, history and personalities of science
title_fullStr Scientific journeys: a physicist explores the culture, history and personalities of science
title_full_unstemmed Scientific journeys: a physicist explores the culture, history and personalities of science
title_short Scientific journeys: a physicist explores the culture, history and personalities of science
title_sort scientific journeys: a physicist explores the culture, history and personalities of science
topic Science in General
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-55800-0
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2740550
work_keys_str_mv AT dyllahfrederick scientificjourneysaphysicistexplorestheculturehistoryandpersonalitiesofscience