| Holton,
G., Einstein, History, and Other
Passions
Addison-Wesley,
1996; Harvard University Press, 2000
Part I, Learning
from Einstein:
Einstein’s Influence on the Culture
of Our Time; Einstein and the Goal of Science; Of Physics,
Love and Other Passions: The Letters of Albert and Mileva;
What, Precisely, Is ‘Thinking’?...Einstein’s
Answer.
Part II, Science in History:
What Place
for Science in Our Culture at the ‘End of the Modern
Era’?;
The Public Image of Science; ‘Doing One’s
Damnedest’: The Evolution of Trust in Scientific
Findings; Imagination in Science; Understanding the History
of Science.
Part III, Personalities in Physics:
The
Trials of J. Robert Oppenheimer; Percy W. Bridgman, Physicist
and Philosopher; I. I. Rabi, Citizen-Scientist; Feynman’s
Adventures; Michael Polanyi and the History of Science;
Part IV, Science for Students: How Can Science Courses
Use the History of Science?; Faraday’s ‘Advice
to a Lecturer,’ Updated.
Holton, G., Victory & Vexation
in Science: Einstein, Bohr, Heisenberg, and Others.
Harvard University Press, 2005
Part I, Scientists:
Einstein’s Third
Paradise; The Woman in Einstein’s Shadow, and a
First Glimpse of Einstein’s Mind at Work; Werner
Heisenberg and Albert Einstein; Bohr, Heisenberg, and
What Michael Frayn’s Copenhagen tries
to Tell Us; Enrico Fermi and the Miracle of the Two Tables;
B. F. Skinner, P. W. Bridgman, and the ‘Lost Years’;
I. I. Rabi as Educator and Science Warrior.
Part II,
Science in Context:
Paul Tillich, Albert Einstein, and
the Quest for the Ultimate; Henri Poincaré, Marcel
Duchamp, and Innovation in Science and Art; Perspectives
on the Thematic Analysis of Scientific Thought; The Imperative
for Basic Science that Serves National Needs; The Rise
of Postmodernisms and the ‘End of Science’;
Different Perceptions of ‘Good Science,’ and
Their Effects on Careers of Women Scientists; ‘Only
Connect’: Bridging the Institutionalized Gaps between
the Humanities and Sciences in Teaching.
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