Home
   Home
   Offers
   Offers
   Book of the Month
   Book of the Month
   Catalogue Request
   Catalogue Request
   Subjects
   Subjects
   Art & Architecture
   Art & Architecture
   History
   History
   Pevsner
   Pevsner
   Exhibitions
   Exhibitions
   Events Calendar
   Events Calendar
   Series & Editions
   Series & Editions
   Free Downloads
   Free Downloads
   Shop
   Shop
   About Yale
   About Yale
   Contact Us
   Contact Us
   Links
   Links
   Art & Architecture
   Art & Architecture
   Biography & Autobiography
   Biography & Autobiography
   Current Affairs & Politics
   Current Affairs & Politics
   Earth Sciences
   Earth Sciences
   Economics
   Economics
   Education
   Education
   History
   History
   Language
   Language
   Law
   Law
   Literature
   Literature
   Medicine
   Medicine
   Music
   Music
   Performing Arts
   Performing Arts
   Philosophy
   Philosophy
   Psychology
   Psychology
   Religion & Beliefs
   Religion & Beliefs
   Anchor Yale Bible
   Anchor Yale Bible
   Pevsner Architectural Guides
   Pevsner Architectural Guides
   National Gallery, London
   National Gallery, London
   Metropolitan Museum of Art
   Metropolitan Museum of Art
   Nota Bene Paperbacks
   Nota Bene Paperbacks
   Pelican History of Art
   Pelican History of Art
   Yale English Monarchs
   Yale English Monarchs
   View Basket
   View Basket
   Your Account
   Your Account
   Help
   Help
   About Yale
   About Yale
   Jobs@Yale
   Jobs@Yale
   Yale Representation
   Yale Representation
   Contact Us
   Contact Us
   Book Enquiry
   Book Enquiry
   Yale USA
   Yale USA
   Pevsner/Looking at Buildings
   Pevsner/Looking at Buildings
   PODULARITY
   PODULARITY
   Paul Mellon Centre
   Paul Mellon Centre
   National Gallery
   National Gallery
View Basket
Check Account
 

NEW Current Affairs Catalogue

 
 
 http://yalepresslondon.wordpress.com/
Advanced Search »

Smoot's Ear The Measure of Humanity
by Robert Tavernor

 
PRICE: £20.00
ISBN: 0300124929
ISBN-13: 9780300124927
PUB DATE: 22 May 2007
FORMAT: Hardback
add this title to your shopping basket

REVIEWS:
'Robert Tavernor's entertaining and thought-provoking lecture challenges how we measure...' - Catherine Croft, Building Design

'At the book's heart is the changeover from ancient methods of measurement based like Smoot on the human body, to the metric system, derived from a more "scientific" measurement of the earth's dimensions...It's a story that Tavernor tells well, with an acute awareness of the ironies and human failings it contains.' - Nick Rennison, The Sunday Times

'Travernor writes with commendable clarity and economy.' - Tibor Fischer, The Sunday Telegraph

'[Tavernor's] raw material is fascinating, and his argument appealing.' - Jonathan Sale, The Independent

Tavernor has uncovered an entertaining and quirky world.' - The First Post

'...a highly readable account of the measuring systems man devised over two millennia...The book explores changing attitudes to measurem focusing on art, architecture, philosophy and the development of scientific thought.' - Architectural Review

DESCRIPTION:
Measures are the subject of this unusual book, in which Robert Tavernor offers a fascinating account of the various measuring systems human beings have devised over two millennia. Tavernor urges us to look beyond the notion that measuring is strictly a scientific activity, divorced from human concerns. Instead, he sets measures and measuring in cultural context and shows how deeply they are connected to human experience and history. The book explores changing attitudes toward measure, focusing on key moments in art, sculpture, architecture, philosophy and the development of scientific thought. It encompasses the journey of western civilization from the construction of the Great Pyramid to the first manned flight to the moon. Beginning with a review of early measuring standards that referred to the feet and inches of ideal bodies, the book then tracks how Enlightenment interest in a truly scientific system of measure, unconnected to the human form, led to the creation of the metric system. This 'rational' approach to measure in turn has inspired artists, architects, writers and others to seek a balance that takes the human story into account. Tavernor concludes with a discussion of measure in our own time, when space travel presents to humankind a direct encounter with the unfathomable measure of the universe.

SUBJECT CLASSIFICATIONS:
Popular science
Scientific standards
Engineering measurement & calibration
History of ideas, intellectual history

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
Illustrations: 20 b&w illustrations
Number of Pages: 256
Dewey: 389.15