In well-established disciplines like history it is not common to find professionals who admit that they are driven by a “calling” or who say they have a “mission” to fulfill. In emerging disciplines, however, the situation is different: in order to gain recognition these new disciplines need highly driven practitioners, who’s calling enables them to overcome opposition or neglect from the side of the established disciplines. A clear example of such a practitioner with a mission in an emerging field of knowledge is the Dutch historian of science Eduard Jan Dijksterhuis (1892–1965). His career as a mathematics teacher, historical scholar, and public intellectual was marked by the desire to re-integrate science and mathematics in culture in general. Dijksterhuis regarded the history of science as a major instrument to bring about this ideal. His magnum opus, The Mechanization of the World Picture (first published in 1950 in Dutch; translated into English in 1961), was the culmination of a lifetime of writing in the service of a cultural vision that can still inspire our own generation.
Studium : tijdschrift voor wetenschaps- en universiteitsgeschiedenis = revue d'histoire des sciences et des universités, ISSN 1876-9055 ; vol. 6 (2013), no. 3-4, p. 267-270
Translation of Ch. 8, sections 1,2, of Dijksterhuis' De elementen van Euclides, with commentary.
Gepubliceerd in
Two decades of mathematics in the Netherlands, 1920-1940 : a retrospection on the occasion of the bicentennial of the Wiskundig Genootschap / ed.: E.M.J. Bertin, H.J.M. Bos, A.W. Grootendorst. - Amsterdam : Mathematical Centre, 1978. - P. 177-195
Impressum
1978
publication
Titel
Afscheid van Rijksuniversiteit : Prof. Dijksterhuis vroeg aandacht voor geschiedenis natuurwetenschappen