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Date: | Fri Mar 31 17:19:23 2006 |
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Going back to an old thread, I recently came
across this lament that physicist's don't know
their own history and an argument about why it matters:
>Not long ago I had the opportunity to give a
>colloquium on these and related matters at a
>major university. Among the 50 or so physicists
>in the audience, not one had read Einstein's
>original papers, yet alone Poincare's. As I
>said, physicists are notorious for taking
>history on faith. Such insouciance, though, has
>not stopped physicists from repeating for
>several generations the usual platitudes about
>the history of their field. One might make a
>case that science is inherently
>anhistorical--certainly recent editions of
>undergraduate physics texts are entirely bereft
>of meaningful history. But if the history of
>science has any relevance to the doing of it,
>surely it is to remind us that science is a
>collective enterprise and to engender in us a
>humble awareness that the landscape of science
>would appear very different had the vast unrecognized
>majority never existed.
"Lost in Einstein's Shadow: Einstein gets the
glory, but others were paving the way"
by Tony Rothman
American Scientist Online
Volume: 94 Number: 2 Page: 112
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1511/2006.2.112
www.americanscientist.org/template/AssetDetail/assetid/49611
Kevin D. Hoover
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