Part I: Cases from the Past
1: Beginnings of Modern Science
2: A Victorian Theory of Everything
3: Electrodynamics as a World View
4: Rationalist Cosmologies
5: Cosmology and Controversy
6: The Rise and Fall of the Bootstrap Programme
Part II: The Present Scene
7: Varying Constants of Nature
8: New Cyclic Models of The Universe
9: Anthropic Science
10: The Multiverse Scenario
11: String Theory and Quantum Gravity
12: Astrobiology and Physical Eschatology
13: Summary: Final Theories and Epistemic Shifts
After graduation from the University of Copenhagen in physics and
chemistry, and a period as a high school teacher, Helge Kragh
became Associate Professor at Cornell University, Departments of
History and Physics. Since 1990 he has held positions as Curator at
the Steno Museum for Science and Medicine, Aarhus University, and
as Professor of History of Science at the University of Oslo. In
1997 he was appointed Professor of History of Science and
Technology at
Aarhus University, Denmark. Kragh is a member of the Royal Danish
Academy of Science and Letters, the International Academy for
History of Science, the European Society for History of Science,
the European
Physical Society, and the European Academy of Science.
`Helge Kragh is one of our best historians of physics, and the
author of several outstanding books. The idea of a history of
highly speculative theories in physics is excellent. Although there
are popular accounts of recent cosmological and grand-unifying
theories, no historian has so far attempted to bring together old
and new cases of such theories. The result makes fascinating
reading and induces thought-provoking comparisons.'
Olivier Darrigol, CNRS: Sphere/Rehseis
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