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Groundbreaking Scientific Experiments, Inventions, and Discoveries of the 18th Century
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In over 60 alphabetical entries, Shectman examines at the tremendous scientific discoveries, inventions, and inquiries of the period.

Table of Contents

Introduction Entries Appendix: Entries by Scientific Field Glossary of Technical Terms Bibliography Names and Subject Index

About the Author

JONATHAN SHECTMAN is former editor of a series of science education books written by the National Science Resources Center, an arm of the Smithsonian Institution.

Reviews

?[t]his well-organized work offers sixty-two essays on an impressively detailed range of significant practical applications of science, new discoveries, and investigations carried out between 1687and 1799. Readers will find the introduction very valuable for its thoughtful consideration of the place of science in the eighteenth century and that century's role as the bridge between the mindsets of figures as disparate as Isaac Newton and James Watt....The "Timeline of Important Events" offers more than merely a simple chronology, with numerous detailed annotations permitting an overview of the progress of eighteenth-century science by decade. This volume and the accompanying members of the series fit well within the scope of any general science collection in libraries of all types from high school through college and university.?-E-STREAMS

?[A]imed at middle school and high school students, undergraduates who are not science majors, and the general public--an audience that would probably find the ignored social and cultural aspects valuable and interesting.?-Library Journal

?[R]ecommended....advanced high-school students, college-level nonscience majors, and adult readers.?-Booklist/Reference Books in Brief

?Human curiosity in the 18th century expanded knowledge in profound ways. Digestion was discovered to be a chemical process. Light was first produced by electricity. Combinations of the three primary colors were determined sufficient to produce all other colors. The metric system was introduced. The idea that humans function as complex machines first appeared. Carbon dioxide was discovered. Air was found to be a collection of gases. Insects were discovered as pollinators. Black holes were first proposed. Water was determined to be compound in nature. Heat was found to be a form of energy. Shectman explores these and many more important 18th-century discoveries and innovations in this well-organized and pleasantly readable encyclopedic resource....Highly recommended. General readers; lower-division undergraduates.?-Choice

"�t�his well-organized work offers sixty-two essays on an impressively detailed range of significant practical applications of science, new discoveries, and investigations carried out between 1687and 1799. Readers will find the introduction very valuable for its thoughtful consideration of the place of science in the eighteenth century and that century's role as the bridge between the mindsets of figures as disparate as Isaac Newton and James Watt....The "Timeline of Important Events" offers more than merely a simple chronology, with numerous detailed annotations permitting an overview of the progress of eighteenth-century science by decade. This volume and the accompanying members of the series fit well within the scope of any general science collection in libraries of all types from high school through college and university."-E-STREAMS

"�A�imed at middle school and high school students, undergraduates who are not science majors, and the general public--an audience that would probably find the ignored social and cultural aspects valuable and interesting."-Library Journal

"�R�ecommended....advanced high-school students, college-level nonscience majors, and adult readers."-Booklist/Reference Books in Brief

"[A]imed at middle school and high school students, undergraduates who are not science majors, and the general public--an audience that would probably find the ignored social and cultural aspects valuable and interesting."-Library Journal

"[R]ecommended....advanced high-school students, college-level nonscience majors, and adult readers."-Booklist/Reference Books in Brief

"Human curiosity in the 18th century expanded knowledge in profound ways. Digestion was discovered to be a chemical process. Light was first produced by electricity. Combinations of the three primary colors were determined sufficient to produce all other colors. The metric system was introduced. The idea that humans function as complex machines first appeared. Carbon dioxide was discovered. Air was found to be a collection of gases. Insects were discovered as pollinators. Black holes were first proposed. Water was determined to be compound in nature. Heat was found to be a form of energy. Shectman explores these and many more important 18th-century discoveries and innovations in this well-organized and pleasantly readable encyclopedic resource....Highly recommended. General readers; lower-division undergraduates."-Choice

"[t]his well-organized work offers sixty-two essays on an impressively detailed range of significant practical applications of science, new discoveries, and investigations carried out between 1687and 1799. Readers will find the introduction very valuable for its thoughtful consideration of the place of science in the eighteenth century and that century's role as the bridge between the mindsets of figures as disparate as Isaac Newton and James Watt....The "Timeline of Important Events" offers more than merely a simple chronology, with numerous detailed annotations permitting an overview of the progress of eighteenth-century science by decade. This volume and the accompanying members of the series fit well within the scope of any general science collection in libraries of all types from high school through college and university."-E-STREAMS

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