Wednesday, April 4, 2012

obligatory Science book interalia

Didn't really go into this book with any preconceptions. It has been sitting on my science books shelf for quite a long time... must have been longer than 4 years. It's really the story of Science that lead from Newton to Maxwell. The history is told in a somewhat roundabout way but is still quite fascinating. Some things irritated me - I thought it was generally good form to not focus on Newton too much as having invented the calculus but rather attribute it to both he and Leibniz - at least that Leibniz should be mentioned in the first sentence... It resolved reasonably well in this respect. Another thing that I know is inevitable in a pop-book dealing with theoretical physics is the incongruence when it comes to the level. Sometimes notions like commutativity, the square root etc, are laboured upon as if the book were written for 10-year-olds, and then the laws of electromagnetism are merely brushed over.

None-the-less, this probably to do with my comfortability in these types of mathematical concepts, and my ignorance when it comes to physics. Overall, I was pretty interested while reading this book and am glad to have added it's general gloss to my mathematical history vocabulary.

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