Niels Bohr, J.L. Heilbron
Niels Bohr, J.L. Heilbron
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Niels Bohr
A Very Short Introduction

Author: J.L. Heilbron

Narrator: Sean Runnette

Unabridged: 4 hr 5 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 06/01/2020


Synopsis

In this Very Short Introduction John Heilbron draws on sources never before presented in English to cover the life and work of one of the most creative physicists of the 20th century. In addition to his role as a scientist, Heilbron considers Bohr as a statesman and Danish cultural icon, who built scientific institutions and pushed for the extension of international cooperation in science to all nation states. As a humanist he was concerned with the cultivation of all sides of the individual, and with the complementary contributions of all peoples to the sum of human culture. Throughout, Heilbron considers how all of these aspects of Bohr's personality influenced his work, as well as the science that made him, in the words of Sir Henry Dale, President of the Royal Society of London, probably the "first among all the men of all countries who are now active in any department of science."

About J.L. Heilbron

J. L. Heilbron was educated at the University of California, Berkeley, in physics and history and began teaching at the University of Pennsylvania in 1964. He returned to Berkeley in 1967, where he rose to become professor of history and vice chancellor. After retiring in 1994 Heilbron taught sporadically at Caltech and Yale, and lived mostly around Oxford, where he has been Senior Research Fellow at Worcester College and the Oxford Museum for History of Science. He has written several books, including Galileo and Love, Literature, and the Quantum Atom: Niels Bohr's 1913 Trilogy Revisited, with Finn Aaserud.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Chris

Magnificent. I’ve read a few stellar books this year, but I am glad to have finished this one before 2020 went out, because it was the best read of the entire year (and since it’s close to the last one I’ve read, chances are, I won’t be able to revise this opinion!). Oxford’s short books have done......more

Goodreads review by bojana

the whole copenhagen circle is a bit of an obsession to me. perhaps even to a point that i had a bit of a blind spot regarding their mistakes and bad approaches to the (still ongoing) quantum mechanics interpretation. i still admire bohr and find him absolutely fascinating. i found that the book wor......more

Goodreads review by Jason

One of the worse Very Short Introductions I've "read" - maybe the math works better on paper, but for an audiobook the equations can be rough. The writing style wasn't very engaging. Felt overly sympathetic towards Denmark during the Nazi occupation.......more