The Making of Geology
Between the mid-seventeenth century and the early nineteenth century there developed in Britain a range of empirical and increasingly secular sciences concerned with the earth. This book presents a detailed account of how this development led to the creation of a complex socio-intellectual fabric of methods, ambitions, facts and ideas which took on the nature of a distinctive, self-sustaining discipline: 'geology'. During this period the criteria for a proper science of the earth were continually reassessed and the earth as an object of science was radically reinterpreted. In his account of this transformation, Dr Porter treats science as an integral but distinct part of the spectrum of man's intellectual and social activities. His account thus illuminates the nature of science and scientific knowledge as a dynamic intellectual, social and cultural enterprise. The book will be of interest not only to historians and philosophers of science but also to social historians and geologists.
Product details
September 2008Paperback
9780521081283
308 pages
214 × 140 × 17 mm
0.3kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. Orientations: c. 1660– 1710
- 2. The natural history of the Earth
- 3. The re-creation of the Earth
- 4. A deepening base: c. 1710–1775
- 5. Continuity and change
- 6. Changing social formations: c.. 1775–1815
- 7. A reformation of knowledge
- 8. The constitution of geology
- Conclusion.