ECU Libraries Catalog

The many voices of modern physics : written communication practices of key discoveries / Joseph E. Harmon and Alan G. Gross ; with an afterword by Randy Allen Harris.

Author/creator Harmon, Joseph E. author.
Other author/creatorGross, Alan G. author.
Other author/creatorHarris, Randy Allen writer of afterword.
Format Book and Print
Publication Info Pittsburgh, PA : University of Pittsburgh Press, [2023]
Copyright Notice ©2023
Descriptionix, 298 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Subject(s)
Contents Introduction -- Special relativity -- General relativity -- Quantum mechanics -- Unification physics -- Cosmic conjectures -- Quantum magic -- Transistor actions -- Astronomical value -- The atomic bomb : anticipated and unanticipated consequences -- Epilogue -- Afterword / by Randy Allen Harris
Abstract "The Many Voices of Modern Physics follows a revolution that began in 1905 when Albert Einstein published papers on special relativity and quantum theory. Unlike Newtonian physics, this new physics often departs wildly from common sense, a radical divorce that presents a unique communicative challenge to physicists when writing for other physicists or for the general public, and to journalists and popular science writers as well. In their two long careers, Joseph Harmon and the late Alan Gross have explored how scientists communicate with each other and with the general public. Here, they focus not on the history of modern physics but on its communication. In their survey of physics communications and related persuasive practices, they move from peak to peak of scientific achievement, recalling how physicists use the communicative tools available--in particular, thought experiments, analogies, visuals, and equations--to convince others that what they say is not only true but significant, that it must be incorporated into the body of scientific and general knowledge. Each chapter includes a chorus of voices, from the many celebrated physicists who devoted considerable time and ingenuity to communicating their discoveries, to the science journalists who made those discoveries accessible to the public, and even to philosophers, sociologists, historians, an opera composer, and a patent lawyer. With their final collaboration, Harmon and Gross offer a tribute to the communicative practices of the physicists who convinced their peers and the general public that the universe is a far more bizarre and interesting place than their nineteenth-century predecessors imagined."-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references (pages 275-287) and index.
ISBN0822947587
ISBN9780822947585

Available Items

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Joyner General Stacks QC5.3 .H37 2023 ✔ Available Place Hold