In the summer of 1900 the city of Paris celebrated the arrival of the 20th Century with a Great Exposition. That was a year of almost universal hope and confidence in the future, and accordingly the Exposition was directed towards a Golden Age of science and industry. Among the 39000000 visitors who passed by those exhibits was an American by the name of Henry Adams, and in a famous autobiography he has recorded his thoughts on this preview of things to come. Henry Adams was the product of a tradition of unity and stability. Under the conflicting forces of the 19th Century he had seen that unity breaking up, and he was searching for what he called a dynamics of history that would anticipate the changing course of mankind. In the Gallery of Machinery at Paris he thought that at last he had found a solution in science.
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April 1956
April 01 1956
Science and the educated man
Julius A. Stratton
Julius A. Stratton
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Physics Today 9 (4), 17–20 (1956);
Citation
Julius A. Stratton; Science and the educated man. Physics Today 1 April 1956; 9 (4): 17–20. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3059932
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