Royal Society Opens Free Online Archive 68
greenechidna writes "The Register reports that the Royal Society has put its archives online. From the article:
'One of the world's most important historical records will be made available online for the first time today. All the Royal Society's journals are free for two months and include stone-cold scientific classics going back to 1665 and the foundations of modern inquiry.'"
You can set up your own account at the Royal Society; if you follow the link in the Reg article, you get logged in to some random account.
DNA (Score:4, Interesting)
Watson and Crick's discovery of DNA (1954) [royalsoc.ac.uk] - requires no introduction really
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http://www.nature.com/nature/dna50/watsoncrick.pd
This is the one with the classic line:
"It has not escaped our notice that the specific pairing we have postulated immediately suggests a possible copying mechanism for the genetic material."
First good picture of the double helix (Score:2)
At the end of the paper, Crick and Watson state "We are most indebted to Dr M.H.F. Wilkins both for informing us of unpublished experimental observations and for the benefit of numerous discussions."
Does that include Rosalyn Franklin's picture [npr.org] that Wilkins showed them without her permission?
Oddest slashdotting ever. (Score:4, Funny)
Stephenson fans take note (Score:1, Informative)
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Ra Ra Ra (Score:3, Funny)
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Now will their Egyptian counterpart step up and one up them, offering free online access to 3000 years of archived research? Where's the URL for "What the stars look like 180 days before the Nile overflows its banks"?
Unfortunately much of the contents of the library of Alexandria burned centuries ago.
Re:Ra Ra Ra (Score:5, Informative)
Moreover, many of the Alexandria books weren't burned. They were "put into general circulation", both into the hands of centuries of attackers [wikipedia.org] like the Arabs from whom European Crusaders (and their campfollower merchats) brought them to the rest of Europe for the first time, and throughout the area many times when security was breached. And of course there are the really ancient works written in stone monuments, artifacts and jewelry.
Ancient Egypt's working civilization lasted for thousands of years, inspiring its culture of actual immortality. Essential to it was a system of info transfer that would survive all kinds of unexpected disasters. If one burning library could wipe it out, we'd never have heard of it.
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Library of Alexandria was established by Greek dynasty and has little to do with ancient Egyptian civilization, about which, btw, we indeed knew very little before Napoleon's Egyptian Expedition.
1) The first point is true, but that still does pretty danged far back. Also, much of what was collected at that time did include older knowledge, so the original library would have included some rather old knowledge. 2) The second point depends on the "we." The western world knew much about ancient Egypt at on
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Have fun.
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/projects/digital/
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I can only think of about 12 people who can translte Hieratic, and only another 13 or 14 that can transpose the Hieratic chacters to Kemetic Heiroglyphics.
It would be fun, but if you translate it and write it into a book you can re-copyright the works (my understanding of current copyright law)
I can se
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If it were my field, I'd be getting funding from pharmacos for decoding, if I could keep the products open / public domain / CC.
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Scanners keep breaking (Score:2)
Ahh yes, the classics (Score:5, Funny)
Matter and its Travels Through the Ether
Mercury: The Miracle Metal for What Ails You
How to Calculate Your Longitudinal Position in Only One Hundred Steps
Gravity: Just a Theory
Calculations for Determining the Age of the Earth Based on the Life Expectancy of Asses
A Treatise on Determining if Women on Ships Cause Shipwrecks
An Examination of Cthulhu and Whether It is Responsible for the Laying of Unknown Bones on the Tops of Mountains
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Well, at least we know some of them had merit. Isn't this the same with women in cars?
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Damn right!
Scientific exploration of folk belief is one of the fundamental contributions of the Enlightenment to civilization.
But if you really want to see something interesting, read the paper immediately following Newton's 1720 publication. You'll never look at the cowpox myth the same way again.
F/S (Score:2)
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No, the f-looking thing is a lowercase s. What you're seeing are probably terminal s's (s's at the end of a word), which look the same as our modern s.
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Period internal s's are similar to the modern s, unless it's being used as part of an 'es' group that some writers perfered to style as a long s, or when preceding a 't', but not starting the word.
-Ashmoore, grad student lingist.
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If I recall correctly, I have also seen a variety of cases where a long s was used as a medial s in situations other than what you are descr
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The "long s" looks like a letter f without the horizontal bar. The "short s" looks like the familiar letter s. Short s is used at the end of words. The Greek alphabet does the same kind of thing with lowercase letter sigma.
Wikipedia sez: Long S [wikipedia.org]
The funny thing is, it turns out that this style of writing is where the character ß (used in German) comes from. I'd always just assumed it was borrowed from Greek.
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By virtue of them existing online, and aided by a Slashdotting, they did just enter the public domain.
Granted, various courts may disagree and you may need to move to Vanuatu to use them, but the more important issue (that they not vanish someday like much of the pre-1970 BBC archive during an overzealous cleaning spree, or worse, by some religious whackjob in
Thanks, and I mean that, but... (Score:2, Troll)
I've checked out a few of their articles so far, and they all have one conspicuous show-stopping problem: These consist of PDFs of scanned images.
Not error-corrected OCRs of scanned images, but the actual images. Great for historians, I suppose, but absolutely bloody useless for searching.
So - Thanks guys, I honestly do appreciate this, but your collection of (text) abstracts would prove more useful than your entire archive of images.
Re:Thanks, and I mean that, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
While I agree that having searchable text would be handy, keep in mind that what you are looking at is what people had to contend with for the past 350 years. They managed to do okay with it.
Re:Thanks, and I mean that, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
Well it's all there for you - get to work.
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- ocr for text search (may be an automated translated document for fast search)
- original detailed image for research
in a page like: see as image (click here), see as html (click here)
may be a xml index would be nice too
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They must have typeset it all by hand using metal templates.
I'm sure they could have benefitted from LaTeX back then...
(The DNA article does look almost like it was typeset in LaTeX.)
I'm surprised at the shape of the 's'. It looks like an 'f'! I had no idea they used to write the letter s differently..
Edmund Stone Work NOT the Discovery of Aspirin (Score:3, Informative)
That, my friends, is... (Score:2)
This is pretty great (Score:2)
Get it while it's hot! (Score:3, Funny)
What fun! Now I can take another look... (Score:4, Interesting)
It was fascinating to open volumes at random at publication intervals of about fifty years and see the evolution of the scientific writing style. Before 1800, it was lively and enthusiastic and communicated a sense of excitement and joy. Around the mid-1800s a transformation took place and it acquired the stodgy, distanced, passive-voice writing style that persists to this day.
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Then again, IANAHPS (History and Philosophy of Science) person.
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History (Score:2, Informative)
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2 months only (Score:1)
Amazing. (Score:2)
Halley's description of his comet' in 1705 (Score:1)
http://www.journals.royalsoc.ac.uk/openurl.asp?gen re=article&issn=0260-7085&volume=24&spage=1882 [royalsoc.ac.uk]
Wonderful.
A nice discussion can be found here:
D. W. Hughes, P. H. Fowler, Bernard Lovell, D. Lynden-Bell, P. J. Message, J. E. Wilkinson, The History of Halley's Comet [and Discuss
Discovery of the atomic nucleus (Score:2, Interesting)
Royal Society lectures also available online (Score:2, Informative)
anyone going to archive this? (Score:1)
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There goes one more curmudgeon's anecdote (Score:3, Insightful)
Students at my University rarely visit the stacks these days. There are plenty of computers and a whole slew of online journals. When relating this story, I would tell people there is still a need to access the Transactions of the Royal Society. When I took my son on a tour of one of the libraries, I went straight to the Transactions and showed him a paper from the 18th century,
Well, I was impressed.
Royal Society keeps fighting Open Access (Score:1)