Instructor: Dr. Matthew ADAMSON
Required Texts:
A class reader available in room 222, and various readings, to be distributed throughout the semester
 
Course Overview
What is science? How do we acquire scientific knowledge? Are scientific organizations and conduct unique? This course will trace the history of science from the Scientific Revolution of the 16th century to the state of science at the end of the twentieth century. It will examine both primary texts written by scientists whose ideas were crucial to the development of modern science, and secondary texts written by important historians, sociologists, and philosophers of science. The course term paper will ask students to assess the usefulness of biography in the history of science by studying a scientific figure of their choice.
Week by Week
Week 1: in class:  Introduction 
----
Week 2:  
	in class: The Scientific Method and the scientific community I
		in class: The Scientific Method and the scientific community II
----
Week 3: Essay 1 Copernicus/Galileo essay due 
	in class: The Scientific Revolution
in class: Scientific Academies
----
Week 4: 
in class: Isaac Newton and Newtonianism  
	 Fictional diary + biography due 
in class: Enlightenment Science: Who? Where? How? Why? 
---- 
Week 5: in class: Voyages of Scientific Discovery 
			  Essay 2 Lavoisier essay due 
	in class: The Chemical Revolution 
---- 
Week 6:  in class: from Electricity and Magnetism to Electromagnetism + Thermodynamics, or, Of Steam and Scientists 
Essay 3 The Reichenstalt essay due 
in class: The Germans: universities, national institutes 
---- 
Week 7:  mid-term week 
	in class: exam review 
in class: mid-term 
---- 
Week 8: In class: Geology, or, the earth moves under our feet 
	--- 
Week 9: in class: Darwin 
	  Term paper proposal due 
in class: Radioactivity; Quanta 
---- 
Week 10: in class: Einstein and scientific revolution 
	 Essay 4 Something from quantum physics/mechanics essay due 
in class: Quantum mechanics and the philosopher-scientists 
---- 
Week 11: in class: Science, the military, and industry 
	in class: Machine-science: particle physics and astronomy 
---- 
Week 12:  Term paper outline due 
in class: The Drosophilists-of milk-jugs, mushed bananas and genetics 
in class: Guest lecture 
---- 
Week 13: in class: Science, WWII, and the Manhattan Project 
  Essay 5  Weinberg essay due 
	in class: Big Science 
---- 
Week 14: Optional term paper draft 
in class: The postwar American physicist and the security state 
in class: Ecology and contemporary life sciences 
---- 
Week 15:  Student presentations 
			Term paper due 
	 exam review 
----