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Slouching Towards Bethlehem
Liên hệ
George Johnson
Introduced by Michael Brooks
George Johnson’s superb book explores the method behind some of science’s most dazzling discoveries – from the exquisite ingenuity of Galileo’s experiments on acceleration, to Newton’s fearless use of needles to understand vision.
‘Delightful, succinct and elegant’
- Roger Penrose
‘Until very recently the most earthshaking science came from individual pairs of hands. From a single mind confronting the unknown.’ George Johnson’s superb science book, first published in 2008, is an exploration less of the scientist who stands behind a discovery, than the method which led to it. Experiments are the crucial steps in the scientific method, enabling us to decide between competing hypotheses to prove our conjectures. Johnson selects ten experiments that posed questions to the universe and found answers. Each is designed with such elegant simplicity that it deserves the term ‘beautiful’.
Galileo is most famous for his astronomical observations, but his rigour in devising an experiment to determine the uniform acceleration of a falling body is, in some ways, the greater achievement. The myth reports him standing on top of the Leaning Tower of Pisa to drop a cannonball and a musket ball, but the actual experiment was far more cleverly thought out (although Johnson adds the delightful detail that he may have sung to keep time accurately). William Harvey devised a simple experiment that anyone could carry out to prove circulation of the blood – applying a tourniquet; while Isaac Newton was prepared to thrust needles into his own eye to test for effects on his perception of light. The names of Lavoisier, Joule, Faraday, Galvani and Pavlov are well known, but the details of their experiments are not. Few non-scientists know of Michelson and Millikan, but their experiments on the speed of light and electrons underpin modern physics.
‘Johnson’s mix of the personal, the erudite and crystalline prose is – like the pull of gravity (see beautiful experiment number one) – an irresistible force’
Scientific American
Albert Einstein insisted that popular science writing is essential because, ‘Restricting the body of knowledge to a small group deadens the philosophical spirit of a people and leads to spiritual poverty.’ Written with zest, clarity and a passion for the genius behind each discovery, Johnson’s book is a source of inspiration and pleasure for all readers. Lavishly illustrated and containing a new introduction from fellow science writer Michael Brooks, this book makes the perfect introduction to ten defining moments in human intellectual discovery.
‘In this homage to ten curious souls, George Johnson singles out efforts eloquent and profound’
New York Times Book Review
Quarter-bound in buckram with printed Modigliani paper sides
Set in Iowan Oldstyle
184 pages
Frontispiece and 14 integrated black & white illustrations, and 16 pages of colour and black & white plates
Plain slipcase
9˝ × 5¾˝