The web of knowing, doing, and patenting. William Thomson’s apparatus room and the history of electricity

This is a case study in the history of electricity, based on William Thomson and his “apparatus room” at the University of Glasgow. The room was packed with electric paraphernalia that Thomson had set up as a newly appointed professor of natural philosophy after 1846, when he was barely 22. From abo...

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Main Author: PANCALDI, GIULIANO
Other Authors: JESSICA RISKIN, MARIO BIAGIOLI, G. Pancaldi
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: Palgrave Macmillan 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11585/89644
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spelling ftunibolognairis:oai:cris.unibo.it:11585/89644 2024-04-14T08:15:10+00:00 The web of knowing, doing, and patenting. William Thomson’s apparatus room and the history of electricity PANCALDI, GIULIANO JESSICA RISKIN, MARIO BIAGIOLI G. Pancaldi 2012 STAMPA http://hdl.handle.net/11585/89644 eng eng Palgrave Macmillan country:GBR place:BASINGSTOKE info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/023010276X info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/9780230102767 info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/wos/WOS:000387678900014 ispartofbook:Nature Engaged: Science in Practice from the Renaissance to the Present firstpage:263 lastpage:285 numberofpages:23 alleditors:JESSICA RISKIN, MARIO BIAGIOLI http://hdl.handle.net/11585/89644 laboratory studie history of science history of technology William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart 2012 ftunibolognairis 2024-03-21T17:16:18Z This is a case study in the history of electricity, based on William Thomson and his “apparatus room” at the University of Glasgow. The room was packed with electric paraphernalia that Thomson had set up as a newly appointed professor of natural philosophy after 1846, when he was barely 22. From about 1857, the facility was known as “the laboratory,” and Thomson and later historians regarded it as the first such teaching facility in the history of physics. During those same years, as is well-known, Thomson developed a theory of electric and magnetic phenomena to which a younger contemporary, James Clerk Maxwell, declared he owed most when introducing his own new approach to the science of electricity and magnetism.As is also wellknown, by the end of 1856 Thomson was one of the directors of the Atlantic Telegraph Company, which laid the first telegraph cables between Ireland and Newfoundland. By 1858, Thomson held a patent for telegraphy, which gave him an important position in the field for decades. Thus, in the dozen years following 1846, Thomson with his apparatus room showed that it was possible to move from the kind of “physical mathematics” in which Thomson himself had been trained as a student in Cambridge, to experimental physics and teaching, to industrial consultancy and patenting, and back again. The case is used to highlight the web of knowing, doing, and patenting in which the science of electricity was woven half a century after the introduction of the voltaic battery, during the slow dawn of the age of electricity. Book Part Newfoundland IRIS Università degli Studi di Bologna (CRIS - Current Research Information System)
institution Open Polar
collection IRIS Università degli Studi di Bologna (CRIS - Current Research Information System)
op_collection_id ftunibolognairis
language English
topic laboratory studie
history of science
history of technology
William Thomson (Lord Kelvin)
spellingShingle laboratory studie
history of science
history of technology
William Thomson (Lord Kelvin)
PANCALDI, GIULIANO
The web of knowing, doing, and patenting. William Thomson’s apparatus room and the history of electricity
topic_facet laboratory studie
history of science
history of technology
William Thomson (Lord Kelvin)
description This is a case study in the history of electricity, based on William Thomson and his “apparatus room” at the University of Glasgow. The room was packed with electric paraphernalia that Thomson had set up as a newly appointed professor of natural philosophy after 1846, when he was barely 22. From about 1857, the facility was known as “the laboratory,” and Thomson and later historians regarded it as the first such teaching facility in the history of physics. During those same years, as is well-known, Thomson developed a theory of electric and magnetic phenomena to which a younger contemporary, James Clerk Maxwell, declared he owed most when introducing his own new approach to the science of electricity and magnetism.As is also wellknown, by the end of 1856 Thomson was one of the directors of the Atlantic Telegraph Company, which laid the first telegraph cables between Ireland and Newfoundland. By 1858, Thomson held a patent for telegraphy, which gave him an important position in the field for decades. Thus, in the dozen years following 1846, Thomson with his apparatus room showed that it was possible to move from the kind of “physical mathematics” in which Thomson himself had been trained as a student in Cambridge, to experimental physics and teaching, to industrial consultancy and patenting, and back again. The case is used to highlight the web of knowing, doing, and patenting in which the science of electricity was woven half a century after the introduction of the voltaic battery, during the slow dawn of the age of electricity.
author2 JESSICA RISKIN, MARIO BIAGIOLI
G. Pancaldi
format Book Part
author PANCALDI, GIULIANO
author_facet PANCALDI, GIULIANO
author_sort PANCALDI, GIULIANO
title The web of knowing, doing, and patenting. William Thomson’s apparatus room and the history of electricity
title_short The web of knowing, doing, and patenting. William Thomson’s apparatus room and the history of electricity
title_full The web of knowing, doing, and patenting. William Thomson’s apparatus room and the history of electricity
title_fullStr The web of knowing, doing, and patenting. William Thomson’s apparatus room and the history of electricity
title_full_unstemmed The web of knowing, doing, and patenting. William Thomson’s apparatus room and the history of electricity
title_sort web of knowing, doing, and patenting. william thomson’s apparatus room and the history of electricity
publisher Palgrave Macmillan
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/11585/89644
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/023010276X
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/9780230102767
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/wos/WOS:000387678900014
ispartofbook:Nature Engaged: Science in Practice from the Renaissance to the Present
firstpage:263
lastpage:285
numberofpages:23
alleditors:JESSICA RISKIN, MARIO BIAGIOLI
http://hdl.handle.net/11585/89644
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