Skip to main content
  • Utility Menu
  • Search
Harvard Logo
HARVARD.EDU

Collections Menu
  • Waywiser
  • People
  • Bibliography
  • Exhibitions
  • Thesaurus
  • My Object Lists
  • About
  • Sign in

Currently indexing

Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Waywiser
  • Exhibit 2008--The Matter of Fact
  • Objects in Exhibit 2008--The Matter of Fact Collection

Objects in Exhibit 2008--The Matter of Fact Collection

  • Filter
  • Collect
  • Info
Objects in Exhibit 2008--The Matter of Fact Collection
1 to 12 of 13 Collection Information
/ 2 Next

Refine Results

Clear All Filters

Artist / Maker / Culture

Museum of Comparative Zoology (4)
William Morton Wheeler (4)
Bussey Institution (3)
Department of Physics, Harvard University (2)
Wilmer C. Anderson (2)
American (1)
Bausch & Lomb Optical Company (1)
C. H. Stoelting Company (1)
Carl Zeiss Jena (1)
Carl Zeiss, Optische Werkstätte, Jena (1)
Central Scientific Company (1)
E. Ducretet & Cie (1)
Edward Samuel Ritchie (1)
Edwin Thacher (1)
German (1)
J. Short (1)
James W. Queen & Company (1)
Keuffel & Esser Company (1)
Richard F. K. Thoma (1)
Rudolf Jung (1)
Spencer Lens Company (1)
Voigtländer (1)
Wilhelm Walb (1)

Classification / Category

Mirror (2)
Backstaff (1)
Cathode Ray Tube (1)
Facial Profile (1)
Microscope (1)
Microscope Case (1)
Microtome (1)
Microtome Knife (1)
Radiation Demonstration Apparatus (1)
Siren (1)
Slide Rule (1)
Transit (1)

Collections

Exhibit 2008--The Matter of Fact (13)

Date

My Object Lists

My Object Lists are disabled and will be available again when the site has finished indexing.

Collection Info

Exhibit 2008--The Matter of Fact

**Curated by Prof. Jimena Canales and the students in her HS 126 course. (See the instruments in this collection for the students' individual contributions.)**

While the word “fact” comes from the Latin factum a noun derived from facere which means to do or to make, this exhibit explores why in modern usage this term often conveys the opposite: facts are not made but they are "out there”. What is the relation between scientific facts and the instruments that are used to produce them? What is a fact? The Matter of Fact temporary exhibit analyzes important facts of nature and the instruments associated with the discovery, invention or maintenance of facts. We look at how scholars have dealt with questions of fact in the past and how they can still provide us with tools for thinking about them. Some famous facts, and some famous arguments for or against them, serve as the backdrop for each of the original contributions to the exhibit.

Fact (1): Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius

Almost all thermometers show that water boils at 100 degrees Celsius (or its equivalent of 212 degrees Fahrenheit). But what happens if you mix equal amounts of freezing water (0 degrees) and boiling water (100 degrees)? If the “capacity of water for receiving heat,

continues permanent at all temperatures between freezing and boiling points” then we can assume that a thermometer should read 50 degrees. Yet different thermometers give different values: while mercury thermometers generally give 50 degrees, alcohol ones give approximately 44, and water ones can give as little as 26. Does this mean that the mercury thermometer is the most accurate? Or does it mean that the real temperature of the mixture is not necessarily “halfway” between freezing and boiling?

Spring 2008

articulated facial profile

articulated facial profile

C. H. Stoelting Company
circa 1923
backstaff

backstaff

American
circa 1775
Cagniard de la Tour-type siren

Cagniard de la Tour-type siren

E. Ducretet & Cie
1870-1890
cathode ray tube, Crookes style

cathode ray tube, Crookes style

German
circa 1940
Jung model II R Thoma-type sledge microtome

Jung model II R Thoma-type sledge microtome

Rudolf Jung
circa 1894
microtome knife

microtome knife

Wilhelm Walb
1880
plane mirror on stand

plane mirror on stand

Wilmer C. Anderson
1937-1941
plane mirror on stand

plane mirror on stand

Wilmer C. Anderson
1937-1939
Ritchie's apparatus for the radiation of heat

Ritchie's apparatus for the radiation of heat

James W. Queen & Company
1880-1890
Spencer no. 1 binocular laboratory compound microscope

Spencer no. 1 binocular laboratory compound microscope

Spencer Lens Company
circa 1920
Thacher's calculating instrument

Thacher's calculating instrument

Keuffel & Esser Company
circa 1932
Voigtländer IVa microscope case

Voigtländer IVa microscope case

Voigtländer
circa 1910
/ 2 Next

facebook iconTwitter Logo

_______________________________
Join Our Mailing List I Contact
_______________________________
The Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments
Science Center, Room 371 • 1 Oxford Street
Cambridge, MA 02138 •chsi@fas.harvard.edu
p. 617-495-2779 •
f. 617-496-5794
_______________________________
The CHSI is one of the

HMSC Logo

Exhibition Hours

The Putnam Gallery
(Science Center 136):
Monday through Friday, 11a.m. to 4p.m.


The Special Exhibitions Gallery
(Science Center 251):
Monday through Friday, 9a.m. to 5p.m.


The Foyer Gallery
Closed for Installation.

All galleries are closed on University Holidays.

Admission is free of charge.
Children must be escorted by an adult.

Admin Login
OpenScholar
Copyright © 2017 The President and Fellows of Harvard College | Privacy | Accessibility | Report Copyright Infringement