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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Michael Sean Mahoney , Thomas Haigh , Thomas HaighPublisher: Harvard University Press Imprint: Harvard University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.422kg ISBN: 9780674055681ISBN 10: 0674055683 Pages: 260 Publication Date: 20 June 2011 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviewsNewcomers to Mahoney will find great value in this collection. -- M. Mounts * Choice * Mahoney understood computer history's significance, and his writings on the subject are important. -- William Baer * Library Journal * This collection of seminal essays of historian Mike Mahoney, with commentary by Thomas Haigh, rewards the reader with a superbly organized panorama of the history of modern computing, its intellectual roots, and its place in the history of technology. -- Charles E. Stenard, Ph.D. (ret. Bell Labs) Even while its cultural influence spreads and develops, the computer remains a challenging enigma. It is one thing and many, a metamorphic instrument of continually growing abilities advancing on our own. We face this challenge in an historical and historiographical poverty that makes us reluctant if not unable to notice the clues leading to the questions we need to ask. In the humanities, mainly ignorant of what computing is, and so unable to say what it is for beyond clever servitude, we are largely stuck implementing deliverables and reiterating frustrations half a century old. In the essays collected here Mahoney's learned, brilliantly insightful and determined pacing at the edge of the jungle (as he put it) is paradoxically the beginning of our exodus. -- Willard McCarty, King's College London Michael Sean Mahoney was first and foremost a historian of science and technology. He came to the history, or as he preferred to say, histories of computing from a thorough background in the development of early modern science and mathematics and of modern technology. More recently he achieved a command of computer science that enabled him to present it as growing out of aspects of the work, on the one hand, of Isaac Newton, Christiaan Huygens, and Rene Descartes and, on the other, of Henry Ford. -- Charles Coulston Gillispie, author of <i>Essays and Reviews in History and History of Science</i> Mahoney understood computer history's significance, and his writings on the subject are important. -- William Baer Library Journal 20110615 Author InformationMichael Sean Mahoney was Professor of History and History of Science at Princeton University. Thomas Haigh is Associate Professor of Information Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |