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The Rise of Modern Science >> Content Detail



Syllabus



Syllabus


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Description


This course will study the development of modern science from the seventeenth century to the present, focusing on Europe and the United States. Key questions include: What is science, and how is it done? How are discoveries made and accepted? What is the nature of scientific progress? What is the impact of science on society? What is the impact of society on science? Topics will be drawn from the histories of physics, chemistry, biology, psychology, and medicine.



Requirements


This class requires 1) active participation in both lectures and weekly recitation sections, 2) a series of written assignments, and 3) a midterm and final exam.



Recitation Sections


Each week's readings must be read prior to recitation section. Active participation in the discussions is required.



Weekly Writing Exercises


A short (roughly 300 words) reading response assignment must be submitted prior to each recitation.



Papers


Two papers are required, each roughly 2000 words (7-8 pages). The papers must be submitted prior to Ses #12 and #24, respectively.

For research consultations, you can meet with MIT's reference librarian for History of Science and Technology.



Exams


There will be closed-book midterm and final exams, based on material from both lectures and readings.



Grading


Final grades will be based on:


ACTIVITIESPERCENTAGES
Participation15%
Weekly writing20%
Paper 110%
Midterm15%
Paper 220%
Final exam20%



Required Books


Two books are required.

Amazon logo Bowler, Peter J., and Iwan Rhys Morus. Making Modern Science: A Historical Survey. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2005. ISBN: 9780226068619.

Amazon logo Frayn, Michael. Copenhagen. New York, NY: Anchor, 2000. ISBN: 9780385720793.



Class Schedule


SES #TOPICSKEY DATES
Week 1. The legacy of the scientific revolution
1Introduction: the rise of modern science
2The legacy of the scientific revolution
Weeks 2-3. Enlightenment science
3Science in the enlightenment
4Natural history and colonialismWeek 2 response due
5Enlightenment chemistryWeek 3 response due
Weeks 4-5. The nineteenth century: organism and mechanism
6Romantic science
7The science of lifeWeek 4 response due
8Thermodynamics and the industrial revolution
9Physics and the telegraphWeek 5 response due
Weeks 6-7. Evolution
10Darwin and natural selection
11Evolution and societyWeek 6 response due
12Scientific medicinePaper 1 due
Midterm exam
Weeks 8-9. Fin-de-siècle and the crisis of objectivity
13The image of objectivity
14Freud and the science of the mindWeek 8 response due
15Relativity theory and Swiss clocks
16Quantum mechanics and postwar cultureWeek 9 response due
Weeks 10-11. Science and war
17Science and World War II
18Sputnik and the origins of the space raceWeek 10 response due
19Physics and the cold warWeek 11 response due
Weeks 12-13. Genetics and society
20Eugenics
21Molecular biologyWeek 12 response due
22The race for the human genome
23Genetic engineeringWeek 13 response due
Week 14. Science in the 21st century
24Science in the 21st centuryPaper 2 due
25Course overview

 








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