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Kontomaris, Stylianos-Vasileios; Malamou, Anna – Physics Education, 2016
An interesting problem in fluid mechanics, with significant educational importance, is the classic hydrostatic paradox. The hydrostatic paradox states the fact that in different shaped containers, with the same base area, which are filled with a liquid of the same height, the applied force by the liquid on the base of each container is exactly the…
Descriptors: Secondary Education, Comparative Analysis, Physics, Undergraduate Students
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Koznjak, Boris – Physics Education, 2012
During the past few decades, a wide consensus has been reached in the community of science educators that it is almost unimaginable to conduct a quality science education without including the history and philosophy of science in some form in the science curriculum, and this is especially the case for physics education (Matthews 1994). However, in…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Curriculum, Historians, Textbooks
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Michelsen, Claus – Physics Education, 2017
In 1820 the Danish scientist Hans Christian Ørsted discovered the relationship between electricity and magnetism by his famous wire-compass experiment. Ørsted was one of the foremost scientists of the nineteenth century, and he was also one of the leading figures in Denmark in the 19th century with a vital influence in the fields of aesthetics,…
Descriptors: Scientists, Physics, Energy, Foreign Countries
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Gee, Brian; Ebison, Maurice – Physics Education, 1975
Presents suggested readings and reviews for both teacher and student. Gives reasons for including history, sociology, and philosophy in a physics curriculum. (GS)
Descriptors: Book Reviews, College Science, Higher Education, Philosophy
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Cox, G. A. – Physics Education, 1973
Outlines Young's scholastic record, involving his educational background, contributions to optics in physics, and deciphering of hieroglyphics in Egyptian philosophy. (CC)
Descriptors: Biographies, Optics, Philosophy, Physics
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Bligh, Philip – Physics Education, 1989
Explains changes in the scientific world view. Describes the classical mechanistic-reductionist paradigm and some modern examples of changes including evolution, self-organizing universe, non-linearity, subjectivity, and software. (YP)
Descriptors: Epistemology, Evolution, Models, Philosophy
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Nott, Mick – Physics Education, 1994
Describes and evaluates an attempt to teach about Brownian motion and to simultaneously draw out lessons about the nature of science. Outlines the learning tasks, summarizes and analyzes student responses from a questionnaire. (DDR)
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Case Studies, Concept Formation, Foreign Countries
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Marshall, Rick – Physics Education, 2007
"How ScienceWorks" is now the focus of the national science specifications in English schools. This article is a brief introduction to the philosophy of science from the Greeks to the present day that underpins this notion. It consists of a brief summary of the contributions of nine philosophers and/or scientists to the debate: Aristotle, Roger…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Philosophy, Sciences, Scientists
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Stinner, A. – Physics Education, 1994
Argues that high school physics should be grounded in motivating contextual activities and connected to a philosophically and historically valid theoretical structure. Explains the large context problem approach and its effect on generating questions and problems. (DDR)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Educational Strategies, Epistemology, Foreign Countries