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  1. From x-rays to quarks: modern physicists and their discoveries.Emilio Segrè - 1980 - Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications.
    The author, who shared the 1959 Nobel Prize in Physics with Owen Chamberlain, offers impressions and recollections of the development of modern physics. Rather than a chronological approach, Segre emphasizes interesting, complex personalities who often appear only in footnotes. Readers will find that this book adds considerably to their understanding of science and includes compelling topics of current interest.
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  • From falling bodies to radio waves: classical physicists and their discoveries.Emilio Segrè - 1984 - Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications.
    Hailed by the Journal of the History of Astronomy as "charming and witty," this chronicle by a renowned physicist traces the development of scientific thought from the works of the "founding fathers" — Galileo, Huygens, and Newton — to the more recent discoveries of Maxwell, Boltzmann, and Gibbs. 1984 edition.
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  • Physical thought from the Presocratics to the quantum physicists: an anthology.Samuel Sambursky (ed.) - 1974 - New York: Pica Press : distributed by Universe Books.
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  • The scientific imagination: case studies.Gerald James Holton - 1978 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Using firsthand accounts gleaned from notebooks, interviews, and correspondence of such twentieth-century scientists as Einstein, Fermi, and Millikan, Holton shows how the idea of the scientific imagination has practical implications for the history and philosophy of science and the larger understanding of the place of science in our culture.
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  • H. A. Lorentz and the Electromagnetic View of Nature.Russell McCormmach - 1970 - Isis 61 (4):459-497.
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  • The scientific imagination: with a new introduction.Gerald James Holton - 1978 - Cambridge, Ma.: Harvard University Press.
    In this book Gerald Holton takes an opposing view, illuminating the ways in which the imagination of the scientist functions early in the formation of a new ...
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