Roots of Modern Technology An Elegant Survey of the Basic Mathematical and Scientific Concepts

If the ancient Greek philosopher Socrates came to life again today, he would wonder how airplanes fly and light bulbs glow, but not wonder much about the world’s political and social changes that took place since his time. The author puts himself in the position of explaining to Socrates the technol...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wendt, Siegfried
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Berlin, Heidelberg Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2010, 2010
Edition:1st ed. 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer eBooks 2005- - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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245 0 0 |a Roots of Modern Technology  |h Elektronische Ressource  |b An Elegant Survey of the Basic Mathematical and Scientific Concepts  |c by Siegfried Wendt 
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300 |a VII, 449 p  |b online resource 
505 0 |a Explaining Modern Technology -- Explaining Modern Technology -- I: Fundamentals of Mathematics and Logic -- Mathematicians Are Humans Like You and Me – They Count and Arrange -- Mathematicians Are Nothing Special – They Draw and Compare -- When It Helps to Ignore Any Meaning -- About the Methods for Computing the Future -- What Talking and Writing Have in Common -- II: Fundamentals of Natural Sciences -- What the Moon Has to Do with Mechanical Engineering -- How Albert Einstein Disregarded Common Sense -- How a Few Frog Legs Triggered the Origin of Electrical Engineering -- Small, Smaller, Smallest – How the Components of Matter Were Found -- How the Difference between Particles and Waves Disappeared -- How “Recipes” in the Cells of Living Organisms Were Found and Can Be Rewritten -- III: Fundamentals of Engineering -- Why Engineers Are “Playing with Models” -- Everything becomes Digital – Really Everything? 
653 |a Computers and Society 
653 |a Engineering 
653 |a History of Science 
653 |a Technology and Engineering 
653 |a Science / History 
653 |a Computers and civilization 
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520 |a If the ancient Greek philosopher Socrates came to life again today, he would wonder how airplanes fly and light bulbs glow, but not wonder much about the world’s political and social changes that took place since his time. The author puts himself in the position of explaining to Socrates the technological fundamentals behind all our modern conveniences . Since he takes Socrates seriously, the author accepts the challenge of introducing the relevant mathematical and technical concepts, and he does so in a remarkably easy-tounderstand and accurate way. The result is a comprehensive overview of the elements of our technical civilization, an overview properly based upon elementary but solid mathematical and scientific principles. Everyone with an inclination toward science and technology can take advantage of the clear structure, the comprehensive presentation and the many wonderfully-illustrated examples of the book