Uneasy Genius: The Life And Work Of Pierre Duhem von St.L. Jaki | ISBN 9789024728978

Uneasy Genius: The Life And Work Of Pierre Duhem

von St.L. Jaki
Buchcover Uneasy Genius: The Life And Work Of Pierre Duhem | St.L. Jaki | EAN 9789024728978 | ISBN 90-247-2897-5 | ISBN 978-90-247-2897-8
` Uneasy Genius is a tribute not only to the physicist, philosopher, and historian who was Pierre Duhem, but also to the historian, philosopher and physicist who is Stanley L. Jaki. '
John Lyon in ISIS

` On reste confondu devant le livre de Stanley L. Jaki, devant son érudition et l'accumulation de faits . . . Il a tout lu, tout fouillé, tout dépouillé! C'est un oeuvre magistrale qui ne laisse plus rien à écrire sur Pierre Duhem. '
Analyses Bibliographiques

` Ouvrage exceptionel . . . ; cette richesse de la documentation vient étayer chaque affirmation de ses dix chapitres. '
Paul Germain, Secrétaire Perpétuel de l'Académie des Sciences

` . . . This is a book on an `uneasy genius' that deserves to be chewed and digested. '
H. W. Paul in Nature

Uneasy Genius: The Life And Work Of Pierre Duhem

von St.L. Jaki
A hundred years have now gone by since in the midsummer of 1882 Pierre Duhem, a graduate of College Stanislas, completed with brilliant success his entrance exams to the Ecole Normale Superieure and embarked on his career as a theoretical physicist. His father, a textile salesman, hoped that Hierre would pursue a career in business, one of the few professional fields where perhaps he would not have succeeded. Not that young Duhem lacked sense for the practical. He could have easily made a name for himself as an artist had he developed professionally his skill to draw portraits and landscapes. His ability to make a point and his readiness to join in a debate, could have earned him fame as a lawyer. A potential actor was in sight when he entertained friends with mimicry. That as a student of physics he entered and stayed first in his class at the Ecole Normale, did not thwart his talents for the life sciences. No less a biologist than Pasteur tried to obtain Duhem for assistant. His command of Greek and Latin would have secured him a career as a classicist. He was a Frenchman, not to be met too often, whose rightful ad miration for and mastery of his native tongue, did not prove a barrier to the major modern languages. As one who taught himself the complex art of medieval paleo graphy, he could easily have mastered the many auxiliary sciences needed by a consummate historian.