In our scientific age an understanding of physics is part of a
liberal education. Lawyers, bankers, governors, business heads,
administrators, all wise educated people need a lasting
understanding of physics so that they can enjoy those contacts with
science and scientists that are part of our civilization both
materially and intellectually. They need knowledge and
understanding instead of the feelings, all too common, that physics
is dark and mysterious and that physicists are a strange people
with incomprehensible interests. Such a sense of understanding
science and scientists can be gained neither from sermons on the
beauty of science nor from the rigorous courses that colleges have
offered for generations; when the headache clears away it leaves
little but a confused sense of mystery. Nor is the need met by
survey courses that offer a smorgasbord of tidbit--they give
science a bad name as a compendium of information or formulas.
The non-scientist needs a course of study that enables him to
learn real science and make its own--with delight. For lasting
benefits the intelligent non-scientist needs a course of study that
enables him to learn genuine science carefully and then encourages
him to think about it and use it. He needs a carefully selected
framework of topics--not so many that learning becomes superficial
and hurried; not so few that he misses the connected nature of
scientific work and thinking. He must see how scientific knowledge
is built up by building some scientific knowledge of his own, by
reading and discussing and if possible by doing experiments
himself. He must think his own way through some scientific
arguments. He must form his own opinion, with guidance, concerning
the parts played by experiment and theory; and he must be shown how
to develop a taste for good theory. He must see several varieties
of scientific method at work. And above all, he must think about
science for himself and enjoy that. These are the things that this
book encourages readers to gain, by their own study and
thinking.
"Physics for the Inquiring Mind" is a book for the inquiring
mind of students in college and for other readers who want to grow
in scientific wisdom, who want to know what physics really is.
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