LEADER 03680nam 2200409z- 450 001 9910134015603321 005 20210212 035 $a(CKB)9870000000000675 035 $a(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/58289 035 $a(oapen)doab58289 035 $a(EXLCZ)999870000000000675 100 $a20202102d2013 |y 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurmn|---annan 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 00$aResearch and Pedagogy: A History of Quantum Physics through Its Textbooks 210 $cEdition Open Access$d2013 215 $a1 online resource (302 p.) 225 1 $aStudies 2: Max Planck Research Library in the History and Development of Knowledge 311 08$a3-8442-5871-X 330 $aHistorians of quantum physics and early quantum mechanics have seldom paid attention to the ways the new theory was integrated in physics textbooks, perhaps taking for granted that novelties in science can only be taught once they are fully understood and generally accepted. The essays in this volume challenge this view by studying some of the early books and textbooks in which quantum theory was first introduced. By so doing, the authors show the many ways books and textbooks embody pedagogical and research practices in certain local environments (geographical, disciplinary, in terms of expertise, etc.), as well as the circular feedback between research and pedagogy. Textbooks can become the subject of a history of early quantum physics since the very process of writing a textbook, (i.e., of trying to organise a new doctrine to the newcomer in an accessible way), together with its life as an object that is issued, used, changed, and abandoned, incorporates many of the tensions between research and pedagogy. Furthermore, the life of these books can also help us better situate less known actors in the history of quantum physics, by bringing into the picture the reasons, the context, the research agenda, and other aspects that cannot be found in the publication of research papers or in the abundant correspondence between the main physicists involved in this story. The case studies collected in this volume may, at first glance, look like a heterogeneous set. Some books were not, in fact, primarily addressing quantum theory as such, but including some of its early principles in re-shaping the established foundational principles and modes of teaching in fields such as optics and physical chemistry. Others were written by scientists not directly involved in the development of the new physics, and their books were addressed at an audience interested in having only a superficial knowledge of the theory of quanta. Finally, the main actors in the formulation of quantum theory wrote books on the quantum for different purposes: as a way to organise their thoughts, to spread a particular interpretation of the theory, or to press for their personal research agendas, among others. This heterogeneity is, however, the tool the editors use to give a full picture of the role of early textbooks in the history of quantum physics. 517 $aResearch and Pedagogy 610 $aEdition Open Access 610 $ahistory of pedagogy 610 $ahistory of quantum physics 610 $ahistory of science 610 $aMPRL 610 $aphysics textbooks 610 $ascience textbooks 700 $aNavarro$b Jaume$4auth$01418045 702 $aBadino$b Massimiliano$f1973-$4auth 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910134015603321 996 $aResearch and Pedagogy: A History of Quantum Physics through Its Textbooks$93528303 997 $aUNINA