Front cover image for Time for science education : how teaching the history and philosophy of pendulum motion can contribute to science literacy

Time for science education : how teaching the history and philosophy of pendulum motion can contribute to science literacy

The book's argument depends, as do most proposals in education, upon cer­ tain positions in the philosophy of education.
Print Book, English, ©2000
Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, New York, ©2000
xxviii, 439 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm.
9780306458804, 0306458802
43662075
Acknowledgements. Preface. 1. Learning about the Pendulum and Improving Science Education. 2. Navigation and the Longitude Problem. 3. Ancient and Medieval Timekeeping. 4. Galileo and the Pendulum Clock. 5. Galileo's Analysis of Pendulum Motion. 6. Christiaan Huygens and the Pendulum Clock. 7. Perfecting Mechanical Timekeeping and Solving the Longitude Problem. 8. The Pendulum in Newton's Physics. 9. Clocks and Culture: The Clock Analogy in Philosophy and Theology. 10. Science and Philosophy: Some Lessons from the History of Pendulum Motion. 11. Teaching and Learning about Time and Pendulum Motion: Some Theoretical Considerations. 12. Teaching and Learning about Time and Pendulum Motion: Some Pedagogical Considerations. 13. Science Education and Culture. Endnotes. References. Credits.