The Substance of Civilization: Materials and Human History from the Stone Age to the Age of Silicon

Forsideomslag
Skyhorse Publishing, Inc., 28. sep. 2011 - 328 sider
The story of human civilization can be read most deeply in the materials we have found or created, used or abused. They have dictated how we build, eat, communicate, wage war, create art, travel, and worship. Some, such as stone, iron, and bronze, lend their names to the ages. Others, such as gold, silver, and diamond, contributed to the rise and fall of great empires. How would history have unfolded without glass, paper, steel, cement, or gunpowder?

The impulse to master the properties of our material world and to invent new substances has remained unchanged from the dawn of time; it has guided and shaped the course of history. Sass shows us how substances and civilizations have evolved together. In antiquity, iron was considered more precious than gold. The celluloid used in movie film had its origins in the search for a substitute for ivory billiard balls. The same clay used in the pottery of antiquity has its uses in today’s computer chips.

Moving from the Stone Age to the Age of Silicon, from the days of prehistoric survival to the cutting edge of nanotechnology, this fascinating and accessible book connects the worlds of minerals and molecules to the sweep of human history, and shows what materials will dominate the century ahead.
 

Indhold

Acknowledgments
Introduction
The Ages of Stone and Clay
A Primer
Copper and Bronze
Gold Silver and the Rise of Empires
The Age of Iron
A Quick History of Glass
The Birth of Modern Metals
Master of Them
Exploding Billiard Balls and Other Polymers
The Superlative Substance
The Lesson of Nature
The Age of Silicon
Materials in the TwentyFirst Century
Notes

Building for the Ages
Innovations from the East
Stoking the Furnace of Capitalism

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Om forfatteren (2011)

Stephen L. Sass is a professor of materials science and engineering at Cornell University, where he has won a number of teaching awards. He currently lives in Ithaca, New York.

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