Artificial Light: Its Influence upon Civilization

audiobook

Artificial Light: Its Influence upon Civilization

by Matthew Luckiesh

EN·~10 hours·34 chapters

Chapters

34 total

The Century Books of Useful Science

0:02

Transcriber's Notes:

0:22

Artificial Light - ITS INFLUENCE UPON CIVILIZATION

0:32

PREFACE

1:55

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

1:14

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

1:57

ARTIFICIAL LIGHT

0:01

I. LIGHT AND PROGRESS

19:06

II. THE ART OF MAKING FIRE

13:44

III. PRIMITIVE LIGHT-SOURCES

22:32

Description

The book opens with a vivid look at humanity’s earliest attempts to tame fire, from crude oil lamps to the candle‑lit fixtures of the eighteenth century. By tracing these humble beginnings, it shows how each step forward was driven by curiosity and the desire for more reliable illumination. The narrative moves smoothly into the industrial era, where scientific experiments gave rise to arc lamps, incandescent bulbs, and the first street‑light systems.

Beyond the technical milestones, the work explores how brighter, cheaper light reshaped daily life. It explains how factories could run longer, cities grew safer at night, and homes became healthier places to live. Readers also learn how the economics of lighting evolved, with efficiency gains cutting costs dramatically within a single century.

The final sections turn to the artistic side of illumination, illustrating how designers use color, shade, and mood to create compelling spaces. Photographs of historic and modern fixtures punctuate the story, inviting listeners to appreciate both the science and the beauty of artificial light.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~10 hours (578K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by K.D. Thornton, Karina Aleksandrova and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2006-01-29

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

ML

Matthew Luckiesh

1883–1967

A pioneering researcher of light and vision, this early 20th-century scientist helped shape how people understood seeing, color, and illumination. His work at General Electric made him a leading voice in lighting research and earned him the nickname "Father of the Science of Seeing."

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