Interesting article.  FWIW, I've had this review of the same article in my
outbox for the last week. Guess I'll post it.

Nat

>>>
Kirkus Reviews
July 1, 2002
SECTION: NONFICTION
LENGTH: 309 words
ISBN NUMBER: 0-7432-1675-X
AUTHOR: Alder, Ken
TITLE: THE MEASURE OF ALL THINGS: The Seven-Year Odyssey and Hidden Error
That Transformed the World
PUBLISHER: Free Press (416 pp.) $27.00 Oct. 2002
REVIEW:

A robust work of science history and literary travel, with a dose of the
whodunit as a lagniappe. Love it, hate it, or simply use it, as most of the
world does, the metric system is with us to stay, and even the most
resistant of Americans will likely be doing his or her ciphering in grams
and centimeters some day soon. So Alder (History/Northwestern Univ.)
prophesies at points in this tangled story, which traces how the metric
system came to be. The meter, he writes, has a strange but honorable
history, bound up in the revolutionary politics of late-18th-century France
and the brilliant reformer Condorcet, who promised that this new means of
measurement would be "for all people, for all time"-and that in any event it
would replace the staggering array of 250,000 units of measurement used in
France under the monarchy. True to the spirit of the time, the astronomers
Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Delambre and Pierre-Frangois-Andri Mechain set out to
prove that the length of the proposed meter was accurate, calculating it by
geodesic triangulation along a route that took the two of them, step by step
and (beg pardon) inch by inch along the length of France. The journey was
not an easy one, writes Alder, who followed it by bicycle; both Delambre and
Mechain encountered considerable difficulties in the form not only of
geophysical obstacles but also of overzealous revolutionaries who wanted,
among other things, to blow up the steeples from which the two mapped points
along the way. And somewhere a dispirited Mechain made an error in
calculation, one that he attempted to conceal, as did Delambre when
eventually he caught on. The implications remain with us, Alder observes, as
he closes a narrative marred only by occasional repetition. Will satisfy
history-of-science buffs and intellectual historians alike. Author tour

LOAD-DATE: July 1, 2002

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On
Behalf Of Jim Elwell
Sent: Tuesday, 2002 October 08 16:43
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:22553] Metric Book Review


An interesting and delightful book review in the New Yorker, by David Owen:

http://www.newyorker.com/critics/books/?021014crbo_books1



Jim Elwell, CAMS
Electrical Engineer
Industrial manufacturing manager
Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
www.qsicorp.com




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