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9780521187565

The Morals of Measurement: Accuracy, Irony, and Trust in Late Victorian Electrical Practice

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780521187565

  • ISBN10:

    0521187567

  • Edition: Revised
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2011-02-17
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press

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Summary

The Morals of Measurement is a contribution to the social histories of quantification and of electrical technology in nineteenth-century Britain, Germany, and France. It shows how the advent of commercial electrical lighting stimulated the industrialisation of electrical measurement from a skilled labour-intensive activity to a mechanised practice relying on radically new kinds of instruments. Challenging traditional accounts that focus on metrological standards, this book shows instead the centrality of trust when measurement was undertaken in an increasingly complex division of labour with manufactured hardware. Case studies demonstrate how difficult late Victorians found it to agree upon which electrical practitioners, instruments, and metals were most trustworthy and what they could hope to measure with any accuracy. Subtle ambiguities arose too over what constituted 'measurement' or 'accuracy' and thus over the respective responsibilities of humans and technologies in electrical practice. Running alongside these concerns, the themes of body, gender, and authorship feature importantly in controversies over the changing identity of the measurer. In examining how new groups of electrical experts and consumers construed the fairness of metering for domestic lighting, this work charts the early moral debates over what is now a ubiquitous technology for quantifying electricity. Accordingly readers will gain fresh insights, tinged with irony, on a period in which measurement was treated as the definitive means of gaining knowledge of the world.

Table of Contents

Moralizing measurement: (dis) trust in the people, instruments and techniques
Meanings of measurements and accounts of accuracy
Mercurial trust and resistive measures: rethinking the 'metals controversy' of 1860-94
Reading technologies: trust, the embodied instrument user and the visualization of current measurement
Coupled problems of self-induction: the unparalleled and the unmeasurable in AC technology
Measurement at a distance: fairness, trustworthiness and gender in reading the domestic electrical meter
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

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The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

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