For the last decade, my time has been dominated by science policy and family, but I recently had the opportunity to take an extended dip back into the history and historiography of science as the staff coordinator here at the American Institute of Physics for a panel of external experts advising on the strategic direction of our Center for History of Physics (CHP) and Niels Bohr Library & Archives. To brief the panel, I did some background research into the history of these programs, going all the way back to their origins with an ad hoc committee AIP convened, chaired by Harvard University physicist and historian Gerald Holton.
Established in 1960, the Holton Committee resulted in AIP supporting a multi-year project to identify source material concerning the history of “recent physics,” led first by a physicist-historian from the Smithsonian named W. James King, and then, from 1964, Charles Weiner. The Holton Committee became an advisory committee for that effort, which, when it concluded in 1965, became the basis for CHP, with Weiner serving as director.
Notably, the AIP “recent physics” project proceeded in parallel with a similar, better-known project called “Sources in the History of Quantum Physics,” led by Thomas Kuhn, with John Heilbron, Paul Forman, and Lini Allen as staff members. The National Science Foundation funded both projects, and AIP was also involved in the “quantum physics” project as administrator of its NSF grant. What is especially notable to me is that both projects were aimed at systematically establishing a broad foundation for future scholarship rather than producing a particular output.
The AIP advisory panel I was working with has since concluded its work, but in my not-so-copious spare time I have continued to poke around in some of the research and commentary surrounding science in the U.S. in the 1960s, and particularly its frequent ambition to apply a systematic approach. This effort has also been motivated by a pair of posts I wrote here in 2012 on Robert Merton’s unsuccessful efforts in that period to build a data-rich sociology of science around Charles Gillispie’s Dictionary of Scientific Biography project and the nascent citation indexing movement led by Eugene Garfield.
My broad impression is that the NSF-funded history projects, DSB, citation indexing, and Merton’s dashed aspirations were part of a loosely coherent movement in the 1960s to “get a handle on science,” for lack of a more precise description. And Holton’s name appears with great frequency, so the purpose of this post is to do a quick survey of some of his activities in this period.
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