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Seven Pillars of Science (2020)

par John Gribbin

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John Gribbin, author of Six Impossible Things, shortlisted for the Royal Society Insight Investment Science Book Prize, presents a tour of seven fundamental scientific truths that underpin our very existence. These 'pillars of science' also defy common sense. For example, solid things are mostly empty space, so how do they hold together? There appears to be no special 'life force', so how do we distinguish living things from inanimate objects? And why does ice float on water, when most solids don't? You might think that question hardly needs asking, and yet if ice didn't float, life on Earth would never have happened. The answers to all of these questions were sensational in their day, and some still are. Throughout history, science has been able to think the unthinkable - and Gribbin brilliantly shows the surprising secrets on which our understanding of life is based.… (plus d'informations)
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In seven short essays, plus a prologue and an epilogue, Gribbin looks at some of the quirks of physics and chemistry that have made it possible for intelligent life to develop on at least one planet in the universe, and speculates about whether these things increase or decrease the chance that there has been a similar development elsewhere. He's a pupil of Fred Hoyle, so this is a subject he's been thinking about for quite some time, and the explanations are concise, clear, and reasonably easy to follow, although a few more diagrams wouldn't have hurt. (Do we really need portraits of all the scientists mentioned in the text?)

I loved the one-page bibliography, which is subdivided into "Easy stuff", "Not so easy stuff", "Hard stuff", and "Entertaining stuff" (Fred Hoyle's The black cloud is the sole entry in the last category). ( )
  thorold | Apr 4, 2023 |
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John Gribbin, author of Six Impossible Things, shortlisted for the Royal Society Insight Investment Science Book Prize, presents a tour of seven fundamental scientific truths that underpin our very existence. These 'pillars of science' also defy common sense. For example, solid things are mostly empty space, so how do they hold together? There appears to be no special 'life force', so how do we distinguish living things from inanimate objects? And why does ice float on water, when most solids don't? You might think that question hardly needs asking, and yet if ice didn't float, life on Earth would never have happened. The answers to all of these questions were sensational in their day, and some still are. Throughout history, science has been able to think the unthinkable - and Gribbin brilliantly shows the surprising secrets on which our understanding of life is based.

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