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From: Dr. Wolfgang Köberer (no email)
Date: Mon May 01 2006 - 03:54:03 EDT
George,
I completely agree with you.
Dava Sobel
1) does not know what she is writing about when writing about the practice
of lunar distances and
2) she neglected to have somebody who has sufficient knowledge check her
text.
Alas, that seems to be common practice - there is for instance a "History of
Navigation" published a Mr. Pohl in Germany with many fine pictures but full
of gross factual mistakes - but I still don't want to resign to that kind of
"mistakotainment".
Just another example from Sobel:
p.91 (New York 1995 edition): "...a good navigator could now stand on the
deck of his ship and measure the lunar distances. (Actually, many of the
more careful navigators sat, the better to steady themselves, and the real
sticklers lay down flat on their backs.)"
That could really improve the precision of the observation - provided the
ship was motionless in dock. By the way, Jacques Besson in 1567 already
proposed a gimballed chair for making observations on board of a ship which
did not make it into shipboard practice for obvious reasons.
And another example:
(p.92) "Hadley's quadrant capitalized on the work of astronomers,..."
That is pure nonsense: it could only capitalize on the progress made in
instrument building and craftmanship. But it just sounds nice.
p. 96: "...a German mapmaker, Tobias Mayer,...worked in Nuremberg..."
To call Mayer a mapmaker is about the same as calling Churchill a writer: he
has done that, too, but his real profession and claim to fame lies
elsewhere: Mayer was at the time professor for physics, geography and
astronomy in Göttingen. That would have been easy to look up, but for Sobel
he obviously was on Maskelyne's side and therefore may not have merited a
careful checking of facts.
Regards, Wolfgang
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: Navigation Mailing List
[mailto:]Im Auftrag von George
Huxtable
Gesendet: Sonntag, 30. April 2006 21:44
An:
Betreff: Re: Dava Sobel
She may perhaps be forgiven for confusing parallax with dip, but not for
failing to have the text checked over by someone who
understood those things.
What about page 91-
"As a bonus, Hadley's quadrant boasted its own built-in artificial horizon
when the real horizon disappeared in darkness or in fog."
If only...
George.
=============
contact George Huxtable at
or at +44 1865 820222 (from UK, 01865 820222)
or at 1 Sandy Lane, Southmoor, Abingdon, Oxon OX13 5HX, UK.
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