Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book
Author Wise, M. Norton, author

Title The Values of Precision
Published Princeton : Princeton University Press, 1995

Copies

Description 1 online resource (307 pages)
Contents Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Preface and Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part One: Enlightenment Origins -- One: Quantification, Precision, and Accuracy: Determinations of Population in the Ancien RĂ©gime -- Andrea Rusnock -- Two: A Revolution to Measure: The Political Economy of the Metric System in France -- Ken Alder -- Three: "The Nicety of Experiment": Precision of Measurement and Precision of Reasoning in Late Eighteenth-Century Chemistry -- Jan Golinski -- Four: Precision: Agent of Unity and Product of Agreement Part I-Traveling -- M. Norton Wise
Part Two: Industrial Cultures -- Five: The Meaning of Precision: The Exact Sensibility in Early Nineteenth-Century Germany -- Kathryn M. Olesko -- Six: Accurate Measurement Is an English Science -- Simon Schaffer -- Seven: Precision and Trust: Early Victorian Insurance and the Politics of Calculation -- Eight: The Images of Precision: Helmholtz and the Graphical Method in Physiology -- Frederic L. Holmes and Kathryn M. Olesko -- Nine: Precision: Agent of Unity and Product of Agreement Part II-The Age of Steam and Telegraphy -- M. Norton Wise -- Part Three: Mass Distribution
Ten: The Morals of Energy Metering: Constructing and Deconstructing the Precision of the Victorian Electrical Engineer's Ammeter and Voltmeter -- Graeme J. N. Gooday -- Eleven: Precision Implemented: Henry Rowland, the Concave Diffraction Grating, and the Analysis of Light -- George Sweetnam -- Twelve: The Laboratory of Theory or What's Exact about the Exact Sciences? -- Andrew Warwick -- Thirteen: Precision: Agent of Unity and Product of Agreement Part III-"Today Precision Must be Commonplace" -- M. Norton Wise -- Index -- Contributors
Summary The Values of Precision examines how exactitude has come to occupy such a prominent place in Western culture. What has been the value of numerical values? Beginning with the late eighteenth century and continuing into the twentieth, the essays in this volume support the view that centralizing states--with their increasingly widespread bureaucracies for managing trade, taxation, and armies--and large-scale commercial enterprises--with their requirements for standardization and mass production--have been the major promoters of numerical precision. Taking advantage of the resources available, scientists and engineers have entered a symbiotic relationship with state and industry, which in turn has led to increasingly refined measures in ever-widening domains of the natural and social world. At the heart of this book, therefore, is an inquiry into the capacity of numbers and instruments to travel across boundaries of culture and materials. Many of the papers focus attention on disagreements about the significance and the credibility of particular sorts of measurements deployed to support particular claims, as in the measures of the population of France, the electrical resistance of copper, or the solvency of insurance companies. At the same time they display the deeply cultural character of precision values. Contributors to the volume include Ken Alder, Graeme J. N. Gooday, Jan Golinski, Frederic L. Holmes, Kathryn M. Olesko, Theodore M. Porter, Andrea Rusnock, Simon Schaffer, George Sweetnam, Andrew Warwick, and M. Norton Wise
Notes Description based upon print version of record
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject Physical measurements -- History
Physical measurements
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
LC no. 94019562
ISBN 9780691218120
0691218129
0691016011
9780691016016