Elizabeth Anne Wolfe was born in England in 1939.[2] She studied mathematics, physics, and geology at the
University of London. After moving to the United States and marrying physicist Donald Garber, she earned a Ph.D. from
Case Western Reserve University with a dissertation on Maxwell. She became a faculty member at
Stony Brook University, and retired in 2008.[3]
Garber died from complications of Alzheimer's disease at home on July 1, 2020.[2]
Books
Garber was the author of:
The Language of Physics: The Calculus and the Development of Theoretical Physics in Europe, 1750–1914 (Birkhäuser, 1999)[4]
Garber co-edited several books collecting the works of James Clerk Maxwell:
Maxwell on Saturn's Rings (edited with Stephen G. Brush and C. W. F. Everitt, MIT Press, 1983)[5]
Maxwell on Molecules and Gases (edited with Stephen G. Brush and C. W. F. Everitt, MIT Press, 1986)[6]
Maxwell on Heat and Statistical Mechanics: On "Avoiding All Personal Enquiries of Molecules" (edited with Stephen G. Brush and C. W. F. Everitt, Associated University Presses, 1995)[7]
Garber also edited:
Beyond History of Science: Essays in Honor of Robert E. Schofield (Lehigh University Press, 1990)[8]
Recognition
Garber was named a
Fellow of the American Physical Society in 1989 "for her research in the history of physics, including the development of kinetic theory and molecular science in the 19th century."[9]
References
^Professors emeriti, Stony Brook University Department of History, retrieved 2020-06-12