If the history of physics is to be classified according to the relationship between our accumulation of information on nature and our understanding of this information, one can distinguish three kinds of periods. In the first, these two aspects of science are even, and the new information is fairly promptly digested in terms of existing theoretical schemes. In the second type of situation, the information obtained is basically new in terms of the theory which becomes inadequate to explain it: a crisis develops. Finally, in the third kind of period, a theoretical “break‐through” is achieved, which then quickly makes sense of all the previously accumulated information, and even beyond that makes a multitude of predictions which keeps experimental physics busy for some time.
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November 1962
November 01 1962
High‐energy physics: An account of the 1962 international conference, Geneva, July 4–11
An account of the 1962 International Conference Geneva, July 4–11
Michael J. Moravcsik
Michael J. Moravcsik
Theoretical Division, Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, Livermore
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Michael J. Moravcsik
Theoretical Division, Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, Livermore
Physics Today 15 (11), 17–22 (1962);
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Michael J. Moravcsik; High‐energy physics: An account of the 1962 international conference, Geneva, July 4–11. Physics Today 1 November 1962; 15 (11): 17–22. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3057852
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