A People's History of Science: Miners, Midwives, and Low Mechanicks

Clifford D. Conner
$22.09 $25.99
We all know the history of science that we learned from grade school textbooks: How Galileo used his telescope to show that the earth was not the center of the universe; how Newton divined gravity from the falling apple; how Einstein unlocked the mysteries of time and space with a simple equation. This history is made up of long periods of ignorance and confusion, punctuated once an age by a brilliant thinker who puts it all together. These few tower over the ordinary mass of people, and in the traditional account, it is to them that we owe science in its entirety. This belief is wrong. A People's History of Science shows how ordinary people participate in creating science and have done so throughout history. It documents how the development of science has affected ordinary people, and how ordinary people perceived that development. It would be wrong to claim that the formulation of quantum theory or the structure of DNA can be credited directly to artisans or peasants, but if modern science is likened to a skyscraper, then those twentieth-century triumphs are the sophisticated filigrees at its pinnacle that are supported by the massive foundation created by the rest of us.

Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Nation Books
Published: 11/01/2005
ISBN: 9781560257486
Pages: 568
Weight: 1.55lbs
Size: 8.20h x 5.50w x 1.40d

Review Citations: Kirkus Reviews 10/01/2005 pg. 1060
Library Journal 10/01/2005 pg. 106
Booklist 11/01/2005 pg. 9
LJ Best Sci-Tech Books 03/01/2006 pg. 45
Choice 07/01/2006 pg. 2014