Forging a Human Future
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780988129306
ISBN-10: 0988129302
Pagini: 132
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 8 mm
Greutate: 0.2 kg
Editura: Rock's Mills Press
ISBN-10: 0988129302
Pagini: 132
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 8 mm
Greutate: 0.2 kg
Editura: Rock's Mills Press
Notă biografică
Erika Erdmann was born in Germany on 16 January 1919. Her father, Edmund Altenkirch, was an internationally known scientist whose work in thermodynamics resulted in important advances in the areas of heating and refrigeration technologies, including research that contributed to the development of the heat pump. Erdmann credited her father for instilling in her a thorough understanding of the scientific method and an equally deep love for humanity. To avoid her being exposed to Nazi propaganda that was disseminated through the educational system, Erdmann was schooled at home for part of her childhood, and also assisted her father in his research until her marriage to Karl Erdmann in 1942. In 1953 she and her husband emigrated to Canada, where he worked as an engineer for Domtar and they raised their four children. She enrolled in Sir George Williams University (now Concordia University) in Montreal in 1967 as a mature student, graduating with distinction in 1971. She went on to work as a research assistant for physiological psychologist Roy A. Wise. When her husband retired in 1972, they moved to Nova Scotia, where Erdmann worked for the local public library branch, and where she wrote her first book, Realism and Human Values. She started graduate work at Dalhousie University in 1981, concentrating on the relationship between science and human values, especially the work of Roger W. Sperry and Ralph Burhoe. From 1982 to 1990 she served as library research assistant for Roger Sperry at the California Institute of Technology; during that time she also completed her master's and doctoral degrees, and published Beyond a World Divided. In 1989 she founded the quarterly journal Humankind Advancing, and in 2000 published a second book on Sperry's work, A Mind for Tomorrow. Erdmann continued to live and work in Lockeport, Nova Scotia, following the death of her husband Karl, until her own death in 2006.