A Vast Machine is a beautifully written, analytically insightful, and hugely well-informed account of the development and influence of the models and data that are the foundation of our knowledge that the climate is changing and that human beings are making it change. -- Donald MacKenzie, Professor of Sociology, University of Edinburgh, author of An Engine, Not a Camera This important and articulate book explains how scientists learned to understand the atmosphere, measure it, trace its past, and model its future. Edwards counters skepticism and doom with compelling reasons for hope and a call to action. -- James Rodger Fleming, Professor of Science, Technology and Society, Colby College With this new book, Paul Edwards once again writes the history of technology on a grand scale. Through his investigation of computational science, international governance, and scientific knowledge production, he shows that the very ability to conceptualize a global climate as such is wrapped up in the history of these institutions and their technological infrastructure. In telling this story, Edwards again makes an original contribution to a crowded field. -- Greg Downey, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Paul N. Edwards is Professor in the School of Information and the Department of History at the University of Michigan. He is the author of The Closed World- Computers and the Politics of Discourse in Cold War America (1996) and a coeditor (with Clark Miller) of Changing the Atmosphere- Expert Knowledge and Environmental Governance (2001), both published by the MIT Press.
[A] stimulating, well-written analysis...a visual feast.—Ronald E.
Doel, American Historical Review
This is an excellent book and a valuable resource for all sides in
the debates over global warming.—Steven Goldman, Environmental
History
A compelling account of how political and scientific institutions,
observation networks, and scientific practice evolved together over
several centuries to culminate in the global knowledge
infrastructure we have today.—Chad Monfreda, Review of Policy
Research
A Vast Machine: Computer Models, Climate Data, and the Politics of
Global Warming by Paul Edwards is an outstanding example of the
potential for historians to contribute to broader public debates
and give non-specialists insight into the work done by scientists
and the process by which computer simulation has transformed
scientific practice.—Thomas Haigh, Communications of the ACM
A 2010 Book of the Year—The Economist
A thorough and dispassionate analysis by a historian of science and
technology, Paul Edwards' book is well timed. Although written
before the University of East Anglia e-mail leak, it anticipates
many of the issues raised by the 'climategate' affair. [...] A Vast
Machine puts the whole affair into historical context and should be
compulsory reading for anyone who now feels empowered to
pontificate on how climate science should be done.—Myles Allen,
Nature
A Vast Machine...will be readily accessible to that legendary
target, the general reader...The author's impressive scholarship
and command of his material have produced a truly magisterial
account.—Richard J. Somerville, Science Magazine
I recommend this book with considerable enthusiasm. Although it's a
term reviewers have made into a cliché, I think A Vast Machine is
nothing less than a tour de force. It is the most complete and
balanced description we have of two sciences whose results and
recommendations will, in the years ahead, be ever more intertwined
with the decisions of political leaders and the fate of the human
species.—Noel Castree, American Scientist
On the whole, this is a very good and informative read on the
problems in atmospheric modeling and the way computers are—and have
been—used in the process.—Jeffrey Putnam, Computing Reviews
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