Time's Pendulum: The Quest to Capture Time--From Sundials to Atomic Clocks - Hardcover

9780306457876: Time's Pendulum: The Quest to Capture Time--From Sundials to Atomic Clocks
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Jo Ellen Barnett takes us a step further in our perpetual quest to comprehend time. She bridges the gap between the mechanical clocks which record the fleeting moment as it passes, and the powerful radioactive "clocks" which have opened up to us the eons of the earth's history, by showing that both are based upon the counting of identical time segments. Beginning with a historical look at clocks to tell the time of day, she discusses the impact of such inventions as the church bell, the pendulum, and the wristwatch on human culture, and explains how they've gradually transformed our perception not only of the world, but of time itself.

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From Publishers Weekly:
Einstein showed that time is relative on scales barely comprehensible to most of us. In her steadily engaging new book, Barnett, administrator of the Department of Microbiology at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, shows how our notion of time is relative on a very human level. Time has undergone a long process of standardization over the centuries, she explains. When humankind used sundials, the length of an hour was relative, shorter in the winter and longer in the summer. The Christian church introduced the canonical hours to mark the times for prayers, and various guilds and professions maintained their own time systems. Early mechanical clocks still relied on sundial time because they had to be reset frequently. Thus time was not at all uniform: clocks and bells striking at different times caused such a cacophony in 14th-century Paris that Charles V ordered them all to be synchronized with one at the royal palace. The pendulum clock, with its greatly improved accuracy, put an end to the tyranny of the sun. It also allowed mariners to determine longitude aboard ship for the first time, opening the globe to exploration. The advent of the railroads forced further standardization of time for towns along the tracks, and worldwide time zones put an end to local times once and for all. Now time is measured by the vibrations of the cesium-133 atom to the subatomic degree of precision required by computer-controlled systems. Barnett's book is a triumph of interdisciplinary scholarship that could appeal to a wide variety of readers. 36 illustrations.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist:
In the numbers on our clocks, most of us see merely a summons to work, study, or sleep. Barnett sees much more: she sees the marvelous culmination of humanity's long struggle to understand and regulate the mystery of time. Starting with early farmers' intuitive reading of lengthening shadows, she recounts how mathematicians and inventors first devised ever more sophisticated sundials and waterclocks for measuring the rhythms of nature, and then--in a major conceptual breakthrough--how they transcended those natural rhythms by assembling clocks that marked out an artificially invariant cadence. But time means more than science, and Barnett attends to the cultural contexts within which human hours have been counted: the medieval devotion to God chiming through vesper bells, or the modern profit motive converting time into another commodity for sale. Balanced and intelligent, this history of timekeeping well deserves a few hours in readers' lives--and a couple of inches on library shelves. Bryce Christensen

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  • PublisherPlenum Trade
  • Publication date1998
  • ISBN 10 0306457873
  • ISBN 13 9780306457876
  • BindingHardcover
  • Number of pages340
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Barnett, Jo Ellen
Published by Plenum Trade, New York (1998)
ISBN 10: 0306457873 ISBN 13: 9780306457876
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Book Description Hardcover. Condition: New. Dust Jacket Condition: New. 1st Edition. This copy is in new, unmarked condition bound in black cloth covered boards with bright gilt titling to the spine. This copy is bright, tight, white and square. There is an attractive bookplate to the front paste down. The unclipped dust wrapper is in new condition, it has been covered in clear, removable, mylar, protective film. International postal rates are calculated on a book weighing 1 Kilo, in cases where the book weighs more than 1 Kilo increased postal rates will be quoted, where the book weighs less then postage will be reduced accordingly. Jo Ellen Barnett takes us a step further in our perpetual quest to comprehend time. She bridges the gap between the mechanical clocks which record the fleeting moment as it passes, and the powerful radioactive "clocks" which have opened up to us the eons of the earth's history, by showing that both are based upon the counting of identical time segments. Beginning with a historical look at clocks to tell the time of day, she discusses the impact of such inventions as the church bell, the pendulum, and the wristwatch on human culture, and explains how they've gradually transformed our perception not only of the world, but of time itself. Ref SS 5. Seller Inventory # 029797

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Published by Plenum Trade (1998)
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