Abstract
AbstractSome experiments from the history of physics became so famous that they not only made it into the textbook canon but were transformed into lecture demonstration performances and student laboratory activities in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. While, at first glance, some of these demonstrations as well as the related instruments do resemble their historical ancestors, a closer examination reveals significant differences both in the instruments themselves and in the practices and meanings associated with them. In this paper, I analyse the relation between the research instruments and the respective teaching demonstrations. In doing so, I particularly distinguish between demonstrations that address the process of the actual experimental procedures, and those that focus on the outcome or results (the product) of the experiment. This distinction will be illustrated in some exemplary case studies from the late nineteenth century and the early twentieth in which both the historical experiment and the related educational devices are analysed. The tension between the historical experiment on the one hand, and the different variants of the teaching version on the other, result in the educational as well as epistemological problems that are discussed in this paper.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,History
Reference29 articles.
1. Heat, work and subtle fluids: a commentary on Joule (1850) “On the mechanical equivalent of heat”;Young;Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences,2015
2. A verification of the theory of Brownian movements and a direct determination of the value of ne for gaseous ionization;Fletcher;Physical Review,1911
3. Millikan's vessels;Panusch;Bulletin of the Scientific Instrument Society,2012
4. Changing Images of the Inclined Plane: A Case Study of a Revolution in American Science Education
5. Les gestes de la mesure. Joule, les pratiques de la brasserie et la science