Helmholtz: A Life in Science
David Cahan
(Author)
Description
Hermann von Helmholtz was a towering figure of nineteenth-century scientific and intellectual life. Best known for his achievements in physiology and physics, he also contributed to other disciplines such as ophthalmology, psychology, mathematics, chemical thermodynamics, and meteorology. With Helmholtz: A Life in Science, David Cahan has written a definitive biography, one that brings to light the dynamic relationship between Helmholtz's private life, his professional pursuits, and the larger world in which he lived.
Utilizing all of Helmholtz's scientific and philosophical writings, as well as previously unknown letters, this book reveals the forces that drove his life--a passion to unite the sciences, vigilant attention to the sources and methods of knowledge, and a deep appreciation of the ways in which the arts and sciences could benefit each other. By placing the overall structure and development of his scientific work and philosophy within the greater context of nineteenth-century Germany, Helmholtz also serves as cultural biography of the construction of the scientific community: its laboratories, institutes, journals, disciplinary organizations, and national and international meetings. Helmholtz's life is a shining example of what can happen when the sciences and the humanities become interwoven in the life of one highly motivated, energetic, and gifted person.
Product Details
Price
$67.85
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Publish Date
September 11, 2018
Pages
944
Dimensions
7.1 X 2.3 X 10.1 inches | 4.0 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780226481142
BISAC Categories:
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
David Cahan is the Charles Bessey Professor of History at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. He is the editor of both Hermann von Helmholtz's Science and Culture: Popular and Philosophical Essays and From Natural Philosophy to the Sciences: Writing the History of Nineteenth-Century Science, both published by the University of Chicago Press.
Reviews
"The new standard for all Helmholtz scholars, a comprehensive guide and crucial resource for historians, philosophers or sociologists interested in this scientific luminary."--Henning Schmidgen "Nature "
"Encyclopedic. . . . Cahan's presentation is lucid, patient, and detailed, with frequent backtracks to view material from multiple perspectives. . . . Helmholtz is an excellent, in-depth examination of one of 19th-century Europe's most influential scientists. . . . Recommended."--CHOICE
"By far the most in-depth, culturally situated, and well written analysis of Helmholtz to date--no one knows Helmholtz as well or as thoroughly as David Cahan."--Frederick Gregory, University of Florida
"David Cahan has written a masterful biography whose implicit argument is to present Hermann von Helmholtz as a grand unifier. He does this by following the thread of culture that bound together the life, work, and context of his subject. Given the centrifugal tendencies in each of these realms--the ultimate dissolution of a shared German identity, the increasing specialization of scientific research, and the modern fracture of the self, Cahan's achievement is impressive. By bringing so many disparate sources and topics into coherence, Helmholtz mirrors the very figure it portrays."--Gabriel Finkelstein, History, University of Colorado Denver
"To produce a definitive biography of a protean figure like Helmholtz is a major scholarly achievement, and that is what [Cahan] has accomplished. . . . The treatment is richly detailed, judicious, quietly conservative, and eminently readable. . . . Good biographies paint pictures of individual lives, and Cahan does that vividly . . . . To read David Cahan's biography is to be drawn into meditation about the ironies of scientific fame and the varieties of scientific creativity."--R. Steven Turner "H-Net Reviews "
"An admirably detailed and engaging book. . . . Cahan deserves great praise for having given us a comprehensive biography that will be of enduring value and the greatest interest for anyone concerned with science and human history."--Wall Street Journal
"A magnum opus."--Deborah R. Coen "Times Literary Supplement "
"Doesn't leave much out."--New York Review of Books
"Cahan has prepared the work of a career, collecting what must be nearly every known detail about the life of the German scientist and intellectual . . . . He seemingly effortlessly weaves together Helmholtz's family life, education, academic positions, organizational and political involvements, roles in establishing and administrating institutions, and efforts to popularize recent developments in science. . . . Cahan's use of evidence--which is drawn from a dazzling array of published and manuscript primary sources--is appropriate, sufficient, representative, and faithful. . . . Well worth the time required to read it."--Mathematical Association of America
"It is without a doubt a masterpiece."--Helge Kragh "Metascience "
"A magisterial biography of one of the last of the great polymaths."--Barbara Kiser "Nature "
"David Cahan has just delivered a book that, based on thirty years of work and on archives only recently made available and dispersed throughout the entire world, should long remain the best and most complete biography of the savant [Hermann von Helmholtz]."--Michel André "Books "
"A monumental study that draws together a vast archive of primary sources and scholarship to show the many threads--intellectual, ethical, historical and personal--that cohered in this remarkable nineteenth-century life in science. . . . Cahan's volume magisterially restores Helmholtz's rich historical legacy."--German History
"Encyclopedic. . . . Cahan's presentation is lucid, patient, and detailed, with frequent backtracks to view material from multiple perspectives. . . . Helmholtz is an excellent, in-depth examination of one of 19th-century Europe's most influential scientists. . . . Recommended."--CHOICE
"By far the most in-depth, culturally situated, and well written analysis of Helmholtz to date--no one knows Helmholtz as well or as thoroughly as David Cahan."--Frederick Gregory, University of Florida
"David Cahan has written a masterful biography whose implicit argument is to present Hermann von Helmholtz as a grand unifier. He does this by following the thread of culture that bound together the life, work, and context of his subject. Given the centrifugal tendencies in each of these realms--the ultimate dissolution of a shared German identity, the increasing specialization of scientific research, and the modern fracture of the self, Cahan's achievement is impressive. By bringing so many disparate sources and topics into coherence, Helmholtz mirrors the very figure it portrays."--Gabriel Finkelstein, History, University of Colorado Denver
"To produce a definitive biography of a protean figure like Helmholtz is a major scholarly achievement, and that is what [Cahan] has accomplished. . . . The treatment is richly detailed, judicious, quietly conservative, and eminently readable. . . . Good biographies paint pictures of individual lives, and Cahan does that vividly . . . . To read David Cahan's biography is to be drawn into meditation about the ironies of scientific fame and the varieties of scientific creativity."--R. Steven Turner "H-Net Reviews "
"An admirably detailed and engaging book. . . . Cahan deserves great praise for having given us a comprehensive biography that will be of enduring value and the greatest interest for anyone concerned with science and human history."--Wall Street Journal
"A magnum opus."--Deborah R. Coen "Times Literary Supplement "
"Doesn't leave much out."--New York Review of Books
"Cahan has prepared the work of a career, collecting what must be nearly every known detail about the life of the German scientist and intellectual . . . . He seemingly effortlessly weaves together Helmholtz's family life, education, academic positions, organizational and political involvements, roles in establishing and administrating institutions, and efforts to popularize recent developments in science. . . . Cahan's use of evidence--which is drawn from a dazzling array of published and manuscript primary sources--is appropriate, sufficient, representative, and faithful. . . . Well worth the time required to read it."--Mathematical Association of America
"It is without a doubt a masterpiece."--Helge Kragh "Metascience "
"A magisterial biography of one of the last of the great polymaths."--Barbara Kiser "Nature "
"David Cahan has just delivered a book that, based on thirty years of work and on archives only recently made available and dispersed throughout the entire world, should long remain the best and most complete biography of the savant [Hermann von Helmholtz]."--Michel André "Books "
"A monumental study that draws together a vast archive of primary sources and scholarship to show the many threads--intellectual, ethical, historical and personal--that cohered in this remarkable nineteenth-century life in science. . . . Cahan's volume magisterially restores Helmholtz's rich historical legacy."--German History