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ISBN: PB: 9780226317830

ISBN: HB: 9780226317816

University of Chicago Press

June 2011

432 pp.

22.6x15 cm

4 halftones

PB:
£37,00
QTY:
HB:
£88,50
QTY:

Categories:

Wrestling with Nature

From Omens to Science

When and where did science begin? Historians have offered different answers to these questions, some pointing to Babylonian observational astronomy, some to the speculations of natural philosophers of ancient Greece. Others have opted for early modern Europe, which saw the triumph of Copernicanism and the birth of experimental science, while yet another view is that the appearance of science was postponed until the nineteenth century.

Rather than posit a modern definition of science and search for evidence of it in the past, the contributors to "Wrestling with Nature" examine how students of nature themselves, in various cultures and periods of history, have understood and represented their work. The aim of each chapter is to explain the content, goals, methods, practices, and institutions associated with the investigation of nature and to articulate the strengths, limitations, and boundaries of these efforts from the perspective of the researchers themselves. With contributions from experts representing different historical periods and different disciplinary specializations, this volume offers a fresh perspective on the history of science and on what it meant, in other times and places, to wrestle with nature.

Reviews

"Here is a lively exploration, across cultures and through time, of human nature's approach to the rest of nature. It begins its search for the origins of 'science' in the days when natural and supernatural were one and the same. The volume's expert contributors catch their curious forebears in the difficult acts of extracting nature's secrets – dividing nature into categories for study, divining in nature the handiwork of gods or mathematical laws, devising observational techniques, and developing experimental methods. The grand sweep of Wrestling with Nature fosters a new appreciation for the flowering of scientific enterprise" – Dava Sobel, author of "Longitude" and "Galileo's Daughter"

"A refreshing reflection on that old word, 'science', that has risen to mean so much. 'Wrestling with Nature' is indispensable for clarifying the many different things people throughout history meant when they tried to make sense of nature and of themselves" – Pietro Corsi, University of Oxford

"'Wrestling with Nature' is a marvelous and much-needed set of essays that surveys how students of nature conceptualized their studies and how they presented their work to a wider audience including patrons, readers, and other students of nature. Broad in its scope, the book offers impressive contributions from leading scholars that take us from the ancient Near East to more modern times and invite us to reexamine everything we thought we knew about what 'science' means and has meant in the Western tradition. Because of its scope, the provocative questions that it raises, and the expertise of the contributors, 'Wrestling with Nature' will be required reading in history of science and science studies classrooms" – Deborah Harkness, University of Southern California