Author
|
Conference
|
Journal
|
Organization
|
Year
|
DOI
Look for results that meet for the following criteria:
since
equal to
before
between
and
Search in all domains
Limit my searches in the following domains
Agriculture Science
Arts & Humanities
Biology
Chemistry
Computer Science
Economics & Business
Engineering
Environmental Sciences
Geosciences
Material Science
Mathematics
Medicine
Physics
Social Science
Multidisciplinary
Keywords
(6)
Cold War
Institutional Change
Materials Science
Advanced Research Projects Agency
Department of Defense
Materials Science and Engineering
Subscribe
Academic
Publications
Von der Werkstoffforschung zur Materials Science
Edit
Von der Werkstoffforschung zur Materials Science
(
Citations: 3
)
BibTex
|
RIS
|
RefWorks
Download
Klaus Hentschel
The manipulation of materials, and to some extent also their systematic classification, form an integral part of the skills and culture of all societies. Yet it took long for proper sciences (e.g., metallurgy, glass technology, polymer chemistry or solid-state physics) to develop out of many processing procedures, tapping the accumulated knowledge about specific material characteristics. In the late 20th century an overarching science of workable materials emerged: materials science. This concept and term originated from major boosts in materials research during WWII and the Cold War, first financed by the U.S.
Department of Defense
and the Advanced Research Project Agency (ARPA). The COSMAT-Report from 1974, written by the American Presidential Science Advisory Committee’s „Committee on the Survey of Materials Science and Engineering" four years after its inception, and subsequent reports heralded in the second institutionalization phase of
materials science
in the USA and with some delay also elsewhere. As the field continued to expand, the demand grew from within in the late 1990s for disciplinary status. This article sorts these claims from the various camps (by solid state physicists vs. chemists vs. engineers) and sets them in the context of unfolding institutional change. The developments within the German-speaking realm, thus far unduly neglected in these debates, are added. I close with a systematic discussion of eight indicator arguments for or against a convergence of this complex field of research into a single coherent discipline. Against Bensaude-Vincent’s (2001: 242) thesis that
materials science
still is an “aggregation of fragments of knowledge", I argue that by 2010
materials science
did indeed achieve disciplinary status in a historically rare and enduring process of discipline formation through “emergence by integration" rather than by differentiation.
Published in 2011.
DOI:
10.1007/s00048-010-0046-x
Cumulative
Annual
View Publication
The following links allow you to view full publications. These links are maintained by other sources not affiliated with Microsoft Academic Search.
(
www.springerlink.com
)
(
www.springerlink.com
)
References
(34)
The construction of a discipline: Materials science in the United States
(
Citations: 10
)
Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent
Journal:
Historical Studies in The Physical and Biological Sciences
, vol. 31, no. 2, pp. 223-248, 2001
The Concept of Materials in Historical Perspective
(
Citations: 1
)
Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent
Published in 2011.
The Scanning Tunneling Microscope
(
Citations: 54
)
Gerd Binnig
,
Heinrich Rohrer
Journal:
Scientific American - SCI AMER
, vol. 253, no. 2, pp. 50-56, 1985
Scanning tunneling microscopy—from birth to adolescence
(
Citations: 91
)
Gerd Binnig
,
Heinrich Rohrer
Journal:
Reviews of Modern Physics - REV MOD PHYS
, vol. 59, no. 3, pp. 615-625, 1987
Pioneering in Industrial Research. The Story of the General Electric Research Laboratory
(
Citations: 3
)
Courtney R. Hall
,
Kendall Birr
Journal:
Economic History Review - ECON HIST REV
, vol. 11, no. 3, 1959
Order by:
Citations
(3)
Nanotechnologie: Eine neue soziale Dynamik an der Schnittstelle zwischen Wissenschaft und Öffentlichkeit
(
Citations: 1
)
Joachim Schummer
Published in 2011.
The Concept of Materials in Historical Perspective
(
Citations: 1
)
Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent
Published in 2011.
Habitus, Hierarchien und Methoden: „Feine Unterschiede“ zwischen Physik und Chemie
(
Citations: 1
)
Carsten Reinhardt
Published in 2011.