Ebook: Steinmetz: Engineer and Socialist
Author: Ronald R. Kline
- Genre: History
- Series: Johns Hopkins Studies in the History of Technology
- Year: 1992
- Publisher: The Johns Hopkins University Press
- City: Baltimore, Maryland
- Language: English
- pdf
When he died suddenly at the height of his fame in 1923, his face was as familiar to Americans as that of Babe Ruth, Henry Ford, Jack Dempsey, or Warren G. Harding. Newspapers quoted his views on religion, politics (he was a Socialist), science, and future technological wonders. All were in¬ trigued by the Horatio Alger tale of the penniless, hunchbacked German immigrant who rose to fame as the Wizard of Science, chief engineer at General Electric, and symbol of the new breed of scientists who daily surpassed the feats of Thomas A. Edison.
In Steinmetz: Engineer and Socialist Ronald R. Kline presents the intellectual biography of Charles Proteus Steinmetz (1865-1923). Educated in Ger¬ many, Steinmetz came to America in 1889 and soon found work with a Yonkers electrical firm. After General Electric purchased the company in 1893, Steinmetz rose to the position of chief con¬ sulting engineer. Obtaining nearly two hundred patents, he made his most important contribu¬ tions in electrical energy loss (or hysteresis), the understanding and wider use of alternating cur¬ rent, and high-voltage power transmission.
The General Electric corporation, Kline explains, became Steinmetz’s home, his identity, and a platform from which he stepped onto the wider stage of world affairs. As leader of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Socialist council¬ man in Schenectady, and part-time professor of political economy at Union College, Steinmetz attempted to “ engineer” society in the direction of a technocratic utopia by promoting welfare capitalism, Lenin’s electrification of the Soviet Union, and other schemes—-all with limited success.
In Steinmetz: Engineer and Socialist Ronald R. Kline presents the intellectual biography of Charles Proteus Steinmetz (1865-1923). Educated in Ger¬ many, Steinmetz came to America in 1889 and soon found work with a Yonkers electrical firm. After General Electric purchased the company in 1893, Steinmetz rose to the position of chief con¬ sulting engineer. Obtaining nearly two hundred patents, he made his most important contribu¬ tions in electrical energy loss (or hysteresis), the understanding and wider use of alternating cur¬ rent, and high-voltage power transmission.
The General Electric corporation, Kline explains, became Steinmetz’s home, his identity, and a platform from which he stepped onto the wider stage of world affairs. As leader of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Socialist council¬ man in Schenectady, and part-time professor of political economy at Union College, Steinmetz attempted to “ engineer” society in the direction of a technocratic utopia by promoting welfare capitalism, Lenin’s electrification of the Soviet Union, and other schemes—-all with limited success.
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