The Measure Of All Things: The Seven Year Odyssey That Transformed the World
By (Author) Ken Alder
Little, Brown Book Group
Abacus
9th August 2004
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
551
Winner of Royal Society Prize for Science Books: General Prize 2003 (UK)
Paperback
480
Width 129mm, Height 196mm, Spine 32mm
334g
THE MEASURE OF ALL THINGS tells the story of how science, revolutionary politics, and the dream of a new economy converged to produce both the metric system and the first struggle over globalization. Amidst the scientific fervor of the Revolution two French scientists, Delambre and Mechain, were sent out on an expedition to measure the shape of the world and thereby establish the metre (which was to be one ten-millionth the distance from pole to equator). Their hope was that people would use the globe as the basis of measure rather than an arbitrary system meted out by the monarchs. As one scientist went north along the French meridian and the other south, their experiences diverged just as radically. After seven years, they received a hero's welcome upon their return to Paris. Mechain, however, was obsessed over a minute error in his calculations that he'd discovered and concealed, and which eventually drove him to his grave. His death forced his colleague Delambre to choose between loyalty to his friend and his science.
'Riveting ... An eye opener' TELEGRAPH 'Fluent in style, rich in both ideas and characters and full of dramatic urgency' SUNDAY TELEGRAPH 'best books of 2002' ECONOMIST 'The agonies and ecstasies involved in the creation of the metre, skilfully told' SUNDAY TIMES 'Exemplary of how successfully non-fiction can marry intellectual range and human interest' THE SPECTATOR
Ken Alder has a PhD from Harvard in History of Science as well as a Physics degree. In 1998 he won the Dexter Prize for the best book on the history of technology.