An American Scientist on the Research Frontier is the first
scholarly study of the nineteenth-century American scientist Edward
Williams Morley. In part, it is the long-overdue story of a man who
lent his name to the Michelson and Morley Ether-Drift Experiment,
and who conclusively established the atomic weight of oxygen. It is
also the untold story of science in provincial America: what
Hamerla presents as science on the "American research
frontier."
Hamerla carefully and usefully directs our attention away from
more familiar sites of scientific activity during the nineteenth
century, such as Harvard, Yale and Johns Hopkins. In so doing, he
expands and reframes our understanding of how and where important
scientific inquiry occurred during these years: not only in the
Northeastern centers of elite academia, but also in the vastly
different cultural contexts of Hudson and Cleveland, Ohio.
This important examination of Morley s struggle for personal and
professional legitimacy extends and transforms our understanding of
science during a foundational period, and leads to a number of
unique conclusions that are vital to the literature and
historiography of science. By revealing important aspects of the
scientific culture of the American heartland, An American Scientist
on the Research Frontier deepens our understanding of an individual
scientist and of American science more broadly. In so doing,
Hamerla changes the way we approach and understand the creation of
scientific knowledge, scientific communities, and the history of
science itself.
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