Showing posts with label chemistry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chemistry. Show all posts

Archimedes to Hawking: Laws of Science and the Great Minds Behind Them Review

Archimedes to Hawking: Laws of Science and the Great Minds Behind Them
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This is Dr. Pickover's first scientific book since his A Beginner's Guide to Immortality and The Mobius Strip writings of 2006. After over a year of pursuing science fiction, the author has provided us with a work that was worth waiting for. This is his best yet.
Archimedes to Hawking is no dry listing of scientific laws. Yes, it does have the important laws of science and the runners-up which Pickover generously calls the "Great Contenders." The reason that the book runs to five hundred pages is that Pickover describes the lives and works of the lawgivers. These are not just people who showed up. Their biographies show that they worked at it. "Genius is one percent inspiration, ninety-nine percent perspiration."
Although the illustrations appear to be more for decoration than explanation, some are quite stunning. I particularly liked Bode's Virgo and Hooke's Flea, even if they have nothing to do with the laws named for those two. More illustrations like those would have been nice.
The author's approach is interesting. The laws are arranged chronologically. Archimedes is the first, but we have to skip almost two millennia to the Renaissance to find the next. The Industrial Revolution then brings the bulk of the science. There is very little past the turn of the twentieth century. Only three of the scientists named in this collection are still alive. Perhaps we have stopped naming scientific laws after people because we regard the laws of nature more as discovery than personal invention, or maybe it is that we are so expectant of future refinements that we now distrust the concept of the immutable law.
The geography of the lawgivers is mostly European. The bulk of the laws are attributed to French, English, and German physicists and chemists. Americans are fourth in number, but only if you include the runner-up category.
Although Pickover is not a physicist by training, he shows that he understands the thought process of the physicist. He shows their quest for understanding of the principles of the universe, the search for the beauty and symmetry of nature.
Even more, Pickover has learned to think like a physicist. Pickover gives a rational explanation for his inclusion of works in the great laws and the runner-up categories. Many people may be surprised to find that Maxwell's Equations do not have a chapter of their own but share the Faraday chapter, while relatively obscure works are included, even one of the runners-up that includes my name. Pickover explains that the individual laws that make up Maxwell's Equations were developed by other people: Ampere, Faraday, Gauss. For a book like this it is necessary to make choices. The author explains his reasoning in a convincing manner. You may argue with his choices, but I think that if he errs, it is mostly on the side of inclusion, not exclusion.
I do not think that you have to be a physicist or chemist to appreciate this book, but some formal science training may help you to appreciate the simplicity and beauty of the equations. I see this book becoming a standard reference work for those who study the physical sciences or the history of science. Or you may just like it for the joy of the science and the history.


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Archimedes to Hawking takes the reader on a journey across the centuries as it explores the eponymous physical laws--from Archimedes' Law of Buoyancy and Kepler's Laws of Planetary Motion to Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle and Hubble's Law of Cosmic Expansion--whose ramifications have profoundly altered our everyday lives and our understanding of the universe. Throughout this fascinating book, Clifford Pickover invites us to share in the amazing adventures of brilliant, quirky, and passionate people after whom these laws are named. These lawgivers turn out to be a fascinating, diverse, and sometimes eccentric group of people. Many were extremely versatile polymaths--human dynamos with a seemingly infinite supply of curiosity and energy and who worked in many different areas in science. Others had non-conventional educations and displayed their unusual talents from an early age. Some experienced resistance to their ideas, causing significant personal anguish. Pickover examines more than 40 great laws, providing brief and cogent introductions to the science behind the laws as well as engaging biographies of such scientists as Newton, Faraday, Ohm, Curie, and Planck. Throughout, he includes fascinating, little-known tidbits relating to the law or lawgiver, and he provides cross-references to other laws or equations mentioned in the book. For several entries, he includes simple numerical examples and solved problems so that readers can have a hands-on understanding of the application of the law.A sweeping survey of scientific discovery as well as an intriguing portrait gallery of some of the greatest minds in history, this superb volume will engage everyone interested in science and the physical world or in the dazzling creativity of these brilliant thinkers.

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From the Ground Up: The Story of A First Garden Review

From the Ground Up: The Story of A First Garden
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Amy Stewart tells the story of how she got to Santa Cruz & took over a patch of seaside earth in which a couple of fruit trees, a handful of shrubs & a host of weeds fought for life.
Each chapter includes helpful tips on neighborly propagation, composting, worm juice, rose pruning techniques, how to make a bug love you & concocting a gardener's bath. They are not what you think - some of this novice's results are hilarious while others are downright commonsensical. One of the first tips she gives us is on Making a Sun Map - do give it a go - I haven't looked at my garden the same since I discovered this clue.
Alongside the story of this young woman's determination to create a garden in which the plants will live up to her vision, she remembers family moments from her childhood while facing down obstinate natives more wily than her. Talk about turf wars!
A fine companion for anyone contemplating becoming addicted to gardening! Amy Stewart has since moved to northern California where she is hard at work on her second garden &, I hope, her second book.

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Janice VanCleave's A+ Projects in Astronomy: Winning Experiments for Science Fairs and Extra Credit Review

Janice VanCleave's A+ Projects in Astronomy:  Winning Experiments for Science Fairs and Extra Credit
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Any high school or junior high school student will want this book for science fair experiments and ideas. It takes you through the fascinating world of astronomy and all of it's mysteries, movements, and eccentricities. The best part is that each topic is accompanied with a sample experiment followed by questions and answers. You'll have great science fair success with this book!

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Solo Review

Solo
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Oh what a brilliant, brilliant novel Rana Dasgupta's Solo is! Books like this are the reason I love to read. I think Rana Dasgupta is a virtuoso of the first order, an author who has boldly created a real work of mastery and originality.
Solo has a haunting quality that continues to stay with me. I can't seem to find the words to describe the book's impact on me. It moved me; it repelled me; it gave me pause; it raised familiar questions concerning reality and dream, thought and mind, what dies or what remains. It is a stunning reading experience, rich in narrative and poetic in prose. It is a novel I am eager to return to again and again because I know I will make new discoveries with each reading.
Solo is both a vehicle for philosophical and psychological musings and a sweeping narrative through history and culture. Literary analysis may engage the book's meaning but will fail to illuminate the spell it can cast on the willing reader. It is a novel of science, of ideas, of poetry, of music. It is written with dreamlike lyricism and emotional intensity, a novel in two movements ~ "Life" and "Daydreams."
"Life" represents the story of Ulrich, a one hundred year old blind Bulgarian man, nearing the end of his life, living minimally and alone in a decaying public housing apartment in modern day Sofia. Through the care and generosity of neighbors, Ulrich has survived. His primary entertainment is his television which keeps him informed of every kind of "modern wisdom." When not listening to his television, he reflects on his life, often wondering if his life was a failure. Ulrich's story is intertwined in a century of Eastern European history, riotously paced from the Bulgaria of the Ottoman Empire, through World War II Nazi and Russian occupations, the post war Communist block and finally an independent Bulgaria struggling to rise from its third world status in the Balkans. His story is one of pathos and though he has failed as a musician, as a chemist, as a lover, as a husband and as a father ~ now as a very old man considering his death, he believes failure and success are irrelevant.
Ulrich's mind is particularly aware during his last days and his spirit has expanded. He "can sense the great black ocean of forgotten things, and, ignoring his beginning and end, he casts off into it. Everything he has known has drained, over time, from the actual world into this ocean and he is blissful in the endless oblivion." He has spent a great quantity of his time in daydreaming, an activity which rejuvenates and sustains him in the "nonsense" of the world around him. He has poured his spirit into these daydreams and while his self may be negated at his death, his dreams will remain.
And this is the introduction to the second movement, "Daydreams," a metaphysical leap from a life lived to a life dreamt. The shift is abrupt and confounding and the unsuspecting reader may be assaulted by the different, discordant edginess to the storytelling. It took a while for me to find the narrative rhythm again and to spot Ulrich's influence, but once I did, my reading experience was heightened. Although Ulrich disappears from the story, "Daydreams" represents the fictions he had cultivated in his mind. The story is now fierce in the telling, moving furiously through a violent post-communist Eastern Europe of gangsters, sex, drugs, crime, prostitution, power, money, fame. It is an ugly, gritty and raw world and however horrible the reading experience becomes, I found it difficult to tear my eyes away. The characterizations are so well delienated, that each character represents a view of life that is far from stereotypical. It is a view of the world that is at once real and imagined, from which there is no easy escape.
Wheras the narrative of the first movement is precise and deliberate, the narrative of the second movement is more chaotic, becoming distant and close at the same time. What I mean by that is that the reader watches the action from a distance without Ulrich's participation but Ulrich's presence is never the less felt. It's smart and effective, making the denouement all the more powerful when Ulrich appears again.
There are so many qualities about Solo ~ the originality, the imagination, the intelligence, the depth ~ that its effect on me is intense and lasting. I know this novel is not for everyone and many will disagree with my opinion but still I must give it my highest rating.

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