History of Science in The Modern Age: Reading
History of Science in The Modern Age: Reading
History of Science in The Modern Age: Reading
HIST518
Spring, 1997
Kansas State University - Syllabus
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reading:
Required:
Recommended:
January 24--Lecture 2: Aristotle and the Great Chain of Being [Alioto 117-177].
February 15--Lecture 8: The Enlightenment and the Idea of Progress [Alioto 262-279].
February 22--Lecture 10: The Chemical World of Berzelius, Avogadro Mendeleev, and
Arrhenius [Jaffe 100-128; 150-180].
March 5--Lecture 13: Natural History and Classical Geology [Alioto 293-302].
V. Classical Biology
March 7--Lecture 14: Darwin, Origin of Species [Korey 57-228; Weiner begin].
April 4--Lecture 20: 19th Century Physics - Thermodynamics and Kinetics [Alioto 333-
349].
April 10--Lecture 21: Radioactivity and Atomic Structure [Alioto 350-375; Jaffe 181-
217; Rhodes 13- 53].
April 11--Lecture 22: Radioactivity and Atomic Structure [Jaffe 218-264; Rhodes 53-
275].
April 16--Lecture 23: Relativity and Uncertainty [Alioto 376-399; Rhodes 279-442].
April 18--Lecture 24: The Making of the Atomic Bomb [Jaffe 265-307; Rhodes 443-
678].
April 23--Lecture 25: Science and the Federal Government [Jaffe 308-309; Rhodes 679-
788].
April 30--Lecture 27: The Chemical Bond, Prof. Isenhour. Watson begin.
May 2--Lecture 28: The Double Helix, Prof. Isenhour [Watson entire].
This page was modified and is maintained by Jim Ehrman and Susannah Bruce of the
History Department's Online History Project.