A Final Story
Science, Myth, and Beginnings
A Final Story
Science, Myth, and Beginnings
In A Final Story, Nasser Zakariya delves into the origins and ambitions of these scientific epics, from the nineteenth century to the present, to see what they reveal about the relationship between storytelling, integrated scientific knowledge, and historical method. While seeking to transcend the perspectives of their own eras, the authors of the epics and the debates surrounding them are embedded in political and social struggles of their own times, struggles to which the epics in turn respond. In attempts to narrate an approach to a final, true account, these synthesizing efforts shape and orient scientific developments old and new. By looking closely at the composition of science epics and the related genres developed along with them, we are able to view the historical narrative of science as a form of knowledge itself, one that discloses much about the development of our understanding of and relationship to science over time.
562 pages | 6 x 9 | © 2017
History: American History, History of Ideas, History of Technology
Physical Sciences: History and Philosophy of Physical Sciences
Reviews
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I
1. Varieties of Natural History: The Whole of the Natural and the Known
2. Dogmas of Unity and Questions of Expertise
3. The Many Faces of Force and the Mutability of Energy
4. Schisms
Part II
5. Undoing and Reassembling Scales and Histories
6. Other Emerging Genres of Synthesis: From the Fabulaic to the Foundational
7. Humanisms, Nuclear Histories, and Nuclear Ages
8. Scientific Myth and Mysticism
Part III
9. Scientific Tribes and Totalizing Myths
10. Cosmos and the Structure of “Epic Myth”
11. Political Cosmologies
12. A New Version of Genesis
Coda: Epic Humanisms
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
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