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Tracing the relationship between science and technology from the
dawn of civilization to the early twenty-first century, James E
McClellan III and Harold Dorn's bestselling book argues that
technology as "applied science" emerged relatively recently, as
industry and governments began funding scientific research that
would lead directly to new or improved technologies. McClellan and
Dorn identify two great scientific traditions: the useful sciences,
which societies patronized from time immemorial, and the
exploration of questions about nature itself, which the ancient
Greeks originated. The authors examine scientific traditions that
took root in China, India, and Central and South America, as well
as in a series of Near Eastern empires in late antiquity and the
Middle Ages. From this comparative perspective, McClellan and Dorn
survey the rise of the West, the Scientific Revolution of the
seventeenth century, the Industrial Revolution, and the modern
marriage of science and technology. They trace the development of
world science and technology today while raising provocative
questions about the sustainability of industrial civilization. This
new edition of Science and Technology in World History offers an
enlarged thematic introduction and significantly extends its
treatment of industrial civilization and the technological super
system built on the modern electrical grid. The Internet and social
media receive increased attention. Facts and figures have been
thoroughly updated and the work includes a comprehensive Guide to
Resources, incorporating the major published literature along with
a vetted list of websites and Internet resources for students and
lay readers.
Journals and letters, translated from the original French, bring
Michaux's work to modern readers and scientists. Known to today's
biologists primarily as the 'Michx,' at the end of more than 700
plant names, AndrE Michaux was an intrepid French naturalist. Under
the directive of King Louis XVI, he was commissioned to search out
and grow new, rare, and never-before-described plant species and
ship them back to his homeland in order to improve French forestry,
agriculture, and horticulture. He made major botanical discoveries
and published them in his two landmark books, Histoire des chEnes
de l'AmErique (1801), a compendium of all oak species recognized
from eastern North America, and Flora Boreali-Americana (1803), the
first account of all plants known in eastern North America.
Straddling the fields of documentary editing, history of the early
republic, history of science, botany, and American studies, AndrE
Michaux in North America: Journals and Letters, 1785-1797 is the
first complete English edition of Michaux's American journals. This
copiously annotated translation includes important excerpts from
his little-known correspondence as well as a substantial
introduction situating Michaux and his work in the larger
scientific context of the day. To carry out his mission, Michaux
traveled from the Bahamas to Hudson Bay and west to the Mississippi
River on nine separate journeys, all indicated on a finely
rendered, color-coded map in this volume. His writings detail the
many hardships - debilitating disease, robberies, dangerous wild
animals, even shipwreck - that Michaux endured on the North
American frontier and on his return home. But they also convey the
soaring joys of exploration in a new world where nature still
reigned supreme, a paradise of plants never before known to Western
science. The thrill of discovery drove Michaux ever onward, even
ultimately to his untimely death in 1802 on the remote island of
Madagascar.
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