How the Great Scientists Reasoned: The Scientific Method in Action
The scientific method is one of the most basic and essential concepts across the sciences, ensuring that investigations are carried out with precision and thoroughness. The scientific method is typically taught as a step-by-step approach, but real examples from history are not always given. This book teaches the basic modes of scientific thought, not by philosophical generalizations, but by illustrating in detail how great scientists from across the sciences solved problems using scientific reason. Examples include Christopher Columbus, Joseph Priestly, Antoine Lavoisier, Michael Faraday, Wilhelm Röntgen, Max Planck, Albert Einstein, and Niels Bohr. Written by a successful research physicist who has engaged in many studies and years of research, all in the attempt to extract the secrets of nature, this book captures the excitement and joy of research. The process of scientific discovery is as delightfully absorbing, as complex, and as profoundly human as falling in love. It can be a roller coaster ride of despairing valleys and exhilarating highs. This book sketches the powerful reasoning that led to many different discoveries, but also celebrates the "ah-ha moments" experienced by each scientist, letting readers share the thrilling instant when each scientist reached the critical revelation in his research. - Places the scientific method in context using historical examples - Suitable for both scientists and non-scientists looking to better understand scientific reasoning - Written in an engaging style with clear illustrations and referencing
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How the Great Scientists Reasoned: The Scientific Method in Action
The scientific method is one of the most basic and essential concepts across the sciences, ensuring that investigations are carried out with precision and thoroughness. The scientific method is typically taught as a step-by-step approach, but real examples from history are not always given. This book teaches the basic modes of scientific thought, not by philosophical generalizations, but by illustrating in detail how great scientists from across the sciences solved problems using scientific reason. Examples include Christopher Columbus, Joseph Priestly, Antoine Lavoisier, Michael Faraday, Wilhelm Röntgen, Max Planck, Albert Einstein, and Niels Bohr. Written by a successful research physicist who has engaged in many studies and years of research, all in the attempt to extract the secrets of nature, this book captures the excitement and joy of research. The process of scientific discovery is as delightfully absorbing, as complex, and as profoundly human as falling in love. It can be a roller coaster ride of despairing valleys and exhilarating highs. This book sketches the powerful reasoning that led to many different discoveries, but also celebrates the "ah-ha moments" experienced by each scientist, letting readers share the thrilling instant when each scientist reached the critical revelation in his research. - Places the scientific method in context using historical examples - Suitable for both scientists and non-scientists looking to better understand scientific reasoning - Written in an engaging style with clear illustrations and referencing
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How the Great Scientists Reasoned: The Scientific Method in Action

How the Great Scientists Reasoned: The Scientific Method in Action

by Gary G. Tibbetts
How the Great Scientists Reasoned: The Scientific Method in Action

How the Great Scientists Reasoned: The Scientific Method in Action

by Gary G. Tibbetts

eBook

$74.95 

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Overview

The scientific method is one of the most basic and essential concepts across the sciences, ensuring that investigations are carried out with precision and thoroughness. The scientific method is typically taught as a step-by-step approach, but real examples from history are not always given. This book teaches the basic modes of scientific thought, not by philosophical generalizations, but by illustrating in detail how great scientists from across the sciences solved problems using scientific reason. Examples include Christopher Columbus, Joseph Priestly, Antoine Lavoisier, Michael Faraday, Wilhelm Röntgen, Max Planck, Albert Einstein, and Niels Bohr. Written by a successful research physicist who has engaged in many studies and years of research, all in the attempt to extract the secrets of nature, this book captures the excitement and joy of research. The process of scientific discovery is as delightfully absorbing, as complex, and as profoundly human as falling in love. It can be a roller coaster ride of despairing valleys and exhilarating highs. This book sketches the powerful reasoning that led to many different discoveries, but also celebrates the "ah-ha moments" experienced by each scientist, letting readers share the thrilling instant when each scientist reached the critical revelation in his research. - Places the scientific method in context using historical examples - Suitable for both scientists and non-scientists looking to better understand scientific reasoning - Written in an engaging style with clear illustrations and referencing

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780123985040
Publisher: Elsevier Science
Publication date: 12/17/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 176
File size: 3 MB

Table of Contents

1. Introduction 2. Elements of scientific thinking 3. Christopher Columbus discovers the "Indies" 4. Antoine Lavoisier and Joseph Priestley both tested the befuddling phlogiston theory 5. Michael Faraday discovered electromagnetic induction but failed to unify electromagnetism and gravitation 6. Wilhelm Röntgen intended to study cathode rays but ended up discovering x-rays 7. Max Plank, the first superhero of quantum theory, saved the universe from the ultraviolet catastrophe 8. Albert Einstein attacked the problem "Are atoms real?" from several angles 9. Nils Bohr modeled the hydrogen atom as a quantized system with compelling exactness 10. Conclusions, status of science, and lessons for our time
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