| Eye
Contact: Toy Microscopes/Real Science |
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11.26.04
- 1.02.05
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The
Gilbert Microscope
A.C. Gilbert graduated from Yale’s Sheffield Scientific
School in 1909. Gilbert trained to be a physician just as modern
scientific medicine ...and the microscope ... displaced 19th century
practical medicine. Gilbert added microscope kits to his popular
lines of Erector and Chemistry sets in 1934. Gilbert was not the
first or only manufacturer of microscopes for young scientists.
But he was unique in his training and in the authority he could
borrow from experts like Yale’s Oscar W. Richards, a leader
in the microscope science of that year.
The
Analog Eye
Any child today can summon images on a computer that were beyond
the reach of the most powerful microscopes of 1934. But can that
child see as well as his or her great grandparent did 70 years
ago? The basic microscope required practice – sectioning,
positioning, illuminating, focusing – that sharpened seeing.
Laboring to see adds depth, perspective and understanding to seeing.
Eye Contact will connect visitors to a different epoch of learning
still thrilling in its simplicity.
The
Eye at Work
To look at the microscope, we are posing a challenge to people
who use state of the art and ultra powerful microscopes in their
every day work: physicians, scientists, technicians artists. Can
you transpose your work into an experiment for a 30X field microscope,
the first step beyond the familiar experience of the naked eye?
Each visitor to the exhibit will carry a 30X front-illuminated
microscope. We will prepare panels with samples and questions
to guide them into your world.
The Microscopes
The
Lessons
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