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Todd Suomela

Guest Post: Tom Levenson on Isaac Newton as the First Cosmologist | Cosmic Variance - 0 views

  • Newton knew what he had done. He was no accidental writer. A parabola, of course, is a curve that keeps on going – and that meant that at the end of a very long and very dense book, he lifted off again from the hard ground of daily reality and said, in effect, look: All this math and all these physical ideas govern everything we can see, out to and past the point where we can’t see anymore. Most important, he did so with implacable rigor, a demonstration that, he argued, should leave no room for dissent. He wrote “The theory that corresponds exactly to so nonuniform a motion through the greatest part of the heavens, and that observes the same laws as the theory of the planets and that agrees exactly with exact astronomical observations cannot fail to be true.” (Italics added).
  • To make his ambitions absolutely clear Newton used the same phrase for the title of book three. There his readers would discover “The System of the World.” This is where the literary structure of the work really comes into play, in my view. Through book three, Newton takes his audience through a carefully constructed tour of all the places within the grasp of his new physics. It begins with an analysis of the moons of Jupiter, demonstrating that inverse square relationships govern those motions. He went on, to show how the interaction between Jupiter and Saturn would pull each out of a perfect elliptical orbit; the real world, he says here, is messier than a geometer’s dream.
Todd Suomela

Advances in the History of Psychology - 0 views

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    Advances in the History of Psychology News & Notes from the Discipline, with Additional Relevant Resources
Todd Suomela

MnCSE - Dancing with the Disco Institute - 0 views

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    Historians of science know that the passage of the first sterilization laws at the beginning of the 20th century occurred during the "eclipse of Darwinism".
Todd Suomela

Savage Minds: Notes and Queries in Anthropology - A Group Blog » The Road to ... - 0 views

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    A few people said they'd like to hear about the process of getting my forthcoming edited volume, Anthropology at the Dawn of the Cold War: The Influence of Foundations, McCarthyism and the CIA published.
Todd Suomela

The Missing Link - 0 views

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    A monthly program about science and its delightfully strange history.
Todd Suomela

Islamic science and the long siesta Robert Irwin TLS - 0 views

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    He has an agreeably caustic and aggressive approach to outdated and erroneous ideas about the history of science. The book is a polemical essay, rather than a history, and welcome as such.
Todd Suomela

SHOTnews.net » Recent dissertations in or near the history of technology - 0 views

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    Business practice: The rise of American astrophysics, 1859-1919 Nisbett, Catherine Elaine. This dissertation takes seriously the production of astrophysical data by examining observatory practices through the lens of business models.
Todd Suomela

About « The Inverse Square Blog - 0 views

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    Thomas Levenson. My day job has me professing science writing at MIT, mostly teaching in the Institute's Graduate Program on Science Writing.
Todd Suomela

Star Formation Extinguished by Quasars | Universe Today - 0 views

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    research based on galactic samples from the sdss, sloan digital sky survey
Todd Suomela

Trials, and a series of errors, in the brain lab - Los Angeles Times - 0 views

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    Story about success and failures in a neurobiology lab at UC Irvine.
Todd Suomela

Center for History of Physics - American Institute of Physics - 0 views

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    includes icos - international catalog of sources for physics and allied sciences
Todd Suomela

Journal of the History of Ideas, Volume 64, 2003 - Table of Contents - 0 views

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    Articles Early Modern Information Overload
Todd Suomela

CBC Radio | Ideas | Features | How To Think About Science - 0 views

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    Historians, sociologists, philosophers and sometimes scientists themselves have begun to ask fundamental questions about how the institution of science is structured and how it knows what it knows. David Cayley talks to some of the leading lights of this
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