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E-raamat: Force: What It Means to Push and Pull, Slip and Grip, Start and Stop

  • Formaat: 328 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Sep-2022
  • Kirjastus: Yale University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780300268942
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  • Formaat: 328 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Sep-2022
  • Kirjastus: Yale University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780300268942

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An eminent engineer and historian tackles one of the most elemental aspects of life: how we experience and utilize physical force

An eminent engineer and historian tackles one of the most elemental aspects of life: how we experience and utilize physical force
 
“Another gem from a master of technology writing.”—Kirkus Reviews
 
Force explores how humans interact with the material world in the course of their everyday activities. This book for the general reader also considers the significance of force in shaping societies and cultures.
 
Celebrated author Henry Petroski delves into the ongoing physical interaction between people and things that enables them to stay put or causes them to move. He explores the range of daily human experience whereby we feel the sensations of push and pull, resistance and assistance. The book is also about metaphorical force, which manifests itself as pressure and relief, achievement and defeat.
 
Petroski draws from a variety of disciplines to make the case that force—represented especially by our sense of touch—is a unifying principle that pervades our lives. In the wake of a prolonged global pandemic that increasingly cautioned us about contact with the physical world, Petroski offers a new perspective on the importance of the sensation and power of touch.

Arvustused

[ Petroski] reveals how integral the work of engineers is to our society. The stories assembled are entertaining and often illuminating.William Gurstelle, Wall Street Journal

Petroski is a vivid writer who enlivens potentially tedious descriptions of the forces at play in routine activities with sensory detail. . . . I admire Force for its attempt to immerse readers in the forces shaping our lives.Matthew Diasio, Science

[ This] diverse and entertaining analysis of force since ancient times ranges from getting dressed, writing with a pencil and shopping to the design of face masks, buildings and spacecraft.Andrew Robinson, Nature

Henry Petroskis poetic prose pairs psychology with physics, producing a joyful joining of fact, fun, and physics. His exploration of the many meanings of force informs while it delights.Don Norman, author of The Design of Everyday Things

Force! From John Keats to Isaac Newton, from pizza boxes to the Forth Bridge, this is a veritable cornucopia that will intrigue and inform the curious reader about a concept often taken for granted.Paul Jowitt, professor of civil engineering systems, HeriotWatt University

Henry Petroski clearly and accessibly explains the most important idea in classical physics and engineering: the concept of force. His vivid prose illustrates the many ways in which forces enter and influence our everyday lives.Howard A. Stone, Princeton University

Henry Petroski is a true polymath with a superbly holistic perspective. Force is a unified field theory of almost everything, exploring the interdependencies among everyday forces and their effects. Albert Einstein would have loved it.Peter G. Neumann, chief scientist, SRI International Computer Science Laboratory

Force is yet another masterful and even more expansive demonstration of Henry Petroskis uncommon capacity for demystifying science and engineering and engaging the public broadly. It is a tour de force!Ron Latanision, Shell Professor of Materials Science and Engineering (emeritus), Massachusetts Institute of Technology  

Preface xi
Prologue Things We Feel 1(8)
1 Pushes and Pulls Sources of Forces
9(10)
2 Gravitation The Heavy Force
19(8)
3 Magnetism Telephones and Tricky Dogs
27(9)
4 Friction House Slippers and Finger Prisons
36(10)
5 Fractious Forces Shaking and Sliding
46(7)
6 Lever, Lever, Cantilever A Single-Handed Force
53(17)
7 Forces, Forces Everywhere Getting Dressed and Going Out
70(16)
8 Moments of Inertia Mass Transit and the Transit of Masses
86(21)
9 Forceful Illusions Schools and Spools
107(19)
10 From Physics to the Physical The Real Feel
126(9)
11 Forces on Inclined Planes Unlevel Playing Fields
135(8)
12 Stretching and Squeezing Springs and Packaging
143(17)
13 A Round Cake in a Square Box And a Sagging Triangle of Pie
160(15)
14 Deployable Structures Tapes Measure
175(7)
15 Anthropomorphic Models From Caryatids to Avatars
182(20)
16 Visible and Invisible Hands Wind, Warp, and Woe
202(13)
17 Overarching Problems Helping Hands
215(15)
18 Pyramids, Obelisks, and Asparagus Ramping Up the Force
230(19)
19 Moving with the Planet Feeling the Earth Quake
249(14)
20 Forces Felt and Heard Precursors to an End
263(10)
Epilogue A Forceful End 273(4)
Acknowledgments 277(4)
Bibliography 281(18)
Index 299
Henry Petroski is the author of nineteen previous nonfiction trade books, including The Pencil and The Evolution of Useful Things, which consider the invention, design, and cultural significance of common objects. He is a distinguished professor emeritus at Duke University.