Description
Mankind has forever strived to learn. The tribe with the better weapons can hunt more efficiently, defend itself better and take what it lacked from their neighbours. With the advent of farming and the ability to domesticate wild animals, the first civilisations began to form. Better housing, advances in medicine and the ability to pass knowledge down through the generations increased mankind s knowledge of himself and his environment. The History of Science follows mankind s journey from primitive stone tools and weapons, through the bronze and iron ages, through the Renaissance and on to a quest for the stars. , , With informative text, illustrations, diagrams and maps and a continuous timeline The History of Science will take you on a journey the like of which has never been seen before. Contents: Stone Age Technology The Bronze Age The Iron Age Science in the Classical World Age of Alchemy Golden Ages Copernicus Moves the Earth Galileo s New View Baconian Revolutions Newton s Laws Using Engine Power Collecting electricity Classifying life Pneumatic chemists Electric currents Atoms and elements Studying light Electromagnetism The Age of Earth Discovering Energy Cell theory and Darwinism James Clerk Maxwell The Periodic Table Standard Time Radioactivity and radiation An Expanding Universe Classifying stars Relativity Quantum Physics An Expanding Universe Antibiotics Electronics Echoes of the Big Bang The Standard Model Superconductors Genetic modification Dark Energy From the Higgs Boson to Gravity waves The Future