<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><i>The History and Philosophy of Science: A Reader</i> brings together seminal texts from antiquity to the end of the nineteenth century and makes them accessible in one volume for the first time.<br/><br/>With readings from Aristotle, Aquinas, Copernicus, Galileo, Descartes, Newton, Lavoisier, Linnaeus, Darwin, Faraday, and Maxwell, it analyses and discusses major classical, medieval and modern texts and figures from the natural sciences. Grouped by topic to clarify the development of methods and disciplines and the unification of theories, each section includes an introduction, suggestions for further reading and end-of-section discussion questions, allowing students to develop the skills needed to: <br/><br/>§ read, interpret, and critically engage with central problems and ideas from the history and philosophy of science<br/>§ understand and evaluate scientific material found in a wide variety of professional and popular settings<br/>§ appreciate the social and cultural context in which scientific ideas emerge<br/>§ identify the roles that mathematics plays in scientific inquiry<br/><br/>Featuring primary sources in all the core scientific fields - astronomy, physics, chemistry, and the life sciences - <i>The History and Philosophy of Science: A Reader</i> is ideal for students looking to better understand the origins of natural science and the questions asked throughout its history. By taking a thematic approach to introduce influential assumptions, methods and answers, this reader illustrates the implications of an impressive range of values and ideas across the history and philosophy of Western science.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>McKaughan and VandeWall set off on a difficult quest: to bottle two millennia of our species' best thoughts about the world and our place in it into a single collection, to do it without overwhelming the new reader with a deluge of opaque material, to cover the ever-expanding panoply of disciplines and practices, and through it all to not lose sight of that humbling sense of wonder at nature that our ancestors experienced and that we who stand on the shoulders of giants would do well to remember. I can't wait to share this with my own students.<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><p><b>Daniel J. McKaughan</b> is Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy at Boston College, USA. <p/><b>Holly VandeWall</b> is Assistant Professor of the Practice of Philosophy in the Department of Philosophy at Boston College, USA.</p>
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