074321675X,The Measure of All Things: The Seven-Year Odyssey and Hidden Error That Transformed the World,The,Measure,of,All,Things:,The,Seven-Year,Odyssey,and,Hidden,Error,That,Transformed,the,World,buy,book,books,purchase,read,Ken Alder
Books
Books
Sign In | View Cart Cart | Wish List | Help
ToysHealthPersonalAdultBaby
ToysHealthPersonalAdultBaby
Home & Garden
Checkout Now »
Cart Cart Cart
0 Items
Cart
100% Safe and Private!
Search     for:    

Books
Browse All Topics    New Releases    Coming Soon

All Topics > Science > Earth Sciences > Geography
 
Browse similar subjects

Shipping

All orders
shipped by
airmail!

Click here for our
Shipping Policies!

 


Quotations

"No nation ancient or modern ever lost the liberty of freely speaking, writing, or publishing their sentiments, but forthwith lost their liberty in general and became slaves."

  - John Peter Zenger

 

 

The Measure of All Things:
The Seven-Year Odyssey and Hidden Error That Transformed the World

 
  by Ken Alder
 
 
 Take A Trip Around The Word
Take A Trip Around The Word
Product
Take A Trip Around The Word
Take A Trip Around The Word
Take A Trip Around The Word
  
  
  
Take A Trip Around The Word
Take A Trip Around The Word 


ZIN Product Number: 10213861

 
eBay (last 12 months)
Auctions: 46
Price Range: $0.07 - 0.33
 
Craigslist (last 12 months)
Classifieds: 20
Price Range: $0.06 - 0.05
 
Amazon Used (last 12 months)
Auctions: 308
Price Range: $0.33 - 0.07
 
ZooScape (last 12 months)
Auctions: 0
Price Range: N/A
 
 
Google listings (non-affiliate) 411
MSN listings (non-affiliate) 33
Yahoo listings (non-affiliate) 66
 


 FastFind Line
Inverse Black Hole
By the Numbers
By the Numbers
Cover To Cover
Cover to Cover
Reader's Corner
Reader's Corner
Related Reading
Related Reading
Inverse Black Hole
FastFind Line
 
 
By The Numbers
 Product Details

  Format: Hardcover, 432 pages
  Publisher: Free Press, The
  ISBN: 074321675X
  Release Date: Jan 6, 1999


 
 
Cover to Cover
 In Brief
Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Delambre and Pierre-Francois-Andre Mechain set out from Paris in 1792 with a common goal. headed in opposite directions, they hoped to measure the size of the earth and calculate the length of one meter. Determined to carve out their own piece of history, Delambre and Mechain faced a myriad of near-fatal challenges, with only their wits and their letters to each other for support. When Mechain discovered that he made a critical error in calculating a meter's length, he was forced to cover it up. To this day that very error lies at the heart of the metric system.

 
 
 From The Publisher
"The truth belongs to everyone, but error is ours alone."

-- The Measure of All Things



Amidst the chaos of the French Revolution, two intrepid astronomers set out in opposite directions from Paris to measure the world, one voyaging north to Dunkirk, the other south to Barcelona. Their findings would help define the meter as one ten-millionth of the distance between the pole and the equator, a standard that has since swept the planet. The Measure of All Things is the astonishing story of one of history's greatest scientific quests, a mission to measure the Earth and define the meter for all nations and for all time.

Yet when Ken Alder located the long-lost correspondence between the two men, along with their mission logbooks, he stumbled upon a two-hundred-year-old secret, and a drama worthy of the great French playwrights. The meter, it turns out, is in error. One of the two astronomers, Pierre-François-André Méchain, made contradictory measurements from Barcelona and, in a panic, covered up the discrepancy. The guilty knowledge of his misdeed drove him to the brink of madness, and ultimately to his death. Only then -- after the meter had already been publicly announced -- did his partner, Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Delambre, discover the truth and face a fateful choice: what matters more, the truth or the appearance of the truth?

To tell the story, Alder has not only worked in archives throughout Europe and America, but also bicycled the entire route traveled by Delambre and Méchain. Both a novelist and a prizewinning historian of science and the French Revolution, Alder summons all his skills to tell how the French Revolution mixed violent passion with the coldest sanity to produce our modern world. It was a time when scientists believed they could redefine the foundations of space and time, creating a thirty-day month, a ten-day week, and a ten-hour day. History, they declared, was to begin anew. But in the end, it was science that was forever changed. The measurements brought back by Delambre and Méchain not only made science into a global enterprise and made possible our global economy, but also revolutionized our understanding of error. Where Méchain conceived of error as a personal failure, his successors learned to tame it.

This, then, is a story of two men, a secret, and a timeless human dilemma: is it permissible to perpetuate a small lie in the service of a larger truth? "Precision is a quest on which travelers, as Zeno foretold, journey halfway to their destination, and then halfway again and again and again, never reaching finality." In The Measure of All Things Ken Alder describes a quest that succeeded even as it failed. It is a story for all people, for all time.


 
 
The Reader's Corner
  Product Review
 
 Be the first to rate this book!     Number of Reviews: 0
 
 
 
Related Reading
 Find similiar books in these subject areas:

All Topics > Science > Earth Sciences > Geography


 
 
 These specific items are very similiar:

The Measure of All Things: The Seven-Year Odyssey and Hidden Error That Transformed the World , by Ken Alder

The Measure of All Things: The Seven-Year Odyssey and Hidden Error That Transformed the World , by Ken Alder

 
 
 People like you also bought:

A Thread Across the Ocean, by John Steele Gordon

The Map That Changed the World: William Smith and the Birth of Modern Geology, by Simon Winchester

Tuxedo Park: A Wall Street Tycoon and the Secret Palace of Science That Changed the Course of World War II, by Jennet Richards Conant

Uncle Tungsten: Memories of a Chemical Boyhood, by Oliver W. Sacks

Nothing Like It in the World : The Men Who Who Built the Transcontinental Railroad 1863-1869, by Stephen E. Ambrose

 
 
 Keywords
Arc measures, History, Meter (Unit), Delambre, J. B. J, (Jean Baptiste Joseph),, Geodetic Surveying, France - History - Revolution And Napoleonic Empire (1789-1815), Science, Earth Sciences - Geography, Europe - France, History, Meter (Unit), Arc measures, Delambre, J B J, Mâechain, Pierre,

 
 
 FastFind Line
Inverse Black Hole
By the Numbers
By the Numbers
Cover To Cover
Cover to Cover
Reader's Corner
Reader's Corner
Related Reading
Related Reading
Inverse Black Hole
FastFind Line
 
 


Make $1 per sale -
Link to ZooScape.com!


About Us   |   Our Policies   |   Your Cart   |   Contact Us   |   Help
ZooScape.com

Copyright 1995 - 2009 - ZooScape.com
 
ZooScape.com