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Hal Hellman

Autor von Zoff im Elfenbeinturm

33 Werke 496 Mitglieder 6 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Hal Hellman is the internationally acclaimed author of 26 popular science books, including the six-book series The World of the Future. He has also written science articles for such publications as the New York Times, Omni, Reader's Digest, Psychology Today, and Geo.

Beinhaltet den Namen: Hal Hellman

Werke von Hal Hellman

Zoff im Elfenbeinturm (1998) 253 Exemplare
The Story of Gold (First Book) (1996) 20 Exemplare
The Lever and the Pulley (1971) 8 Exemplare
Lasers (1968) 7 Exemplare
Spectroscopy 6 Exemplare
Navigation ; Land, sea and Sy (1966) 4 Exemplare

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Geburtstag
1927
Geschlecht
male

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

In explaining scientific arguments, Hellman has to provide enough scientific and historical background to make the dispute clear while simultaneously keeping his explanation understandable to laymen. He does a pretty good job. I can't be objective about this book: I know some science too well and others I find horribly intimidating. For example, I found the chapter on calculus and philosophy (Newton vs. Leibniz) to be a bit obtuse, but the chapter on Darwin very simplified. My bias is clear! I think my favorite chapters were on continental drift, heliocentrism, and paleoanthropology.… (mehr)
 
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wealhtheowwylfing | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 29, 2016 |
Science is a messy place, and what we know to be true today might not be true tomorrow. There are arguments raging in science even today (and I don't mean faux arguments like climate change deniers). This book attempts to give an overview of some of the most famous shifts in science thinking.

Some of these aren't feuds in the way that we would understand the word, since feuds usually require all of the involved parties to still be alive. Several of these are scientists working to show that the previous understanding wasn't accurate. There are some honest-to-goodness feuds to be found here, and those are the most interesting reading, to see where scientists let emotion overrule their data.

The book suffers from the flaw of 20/20 hindsight. Now, many years removed from most of the feuds presented herein, the feuds lose their sense that there was ever actually anything to argue about. The author makes the old arguments seem ignorant and flawed, instead of helping us understand how they were the best scientific knowledge available at the time. Later, with better instruments and a better ability to create experiments.

It's a good enough overview, but none of the feuds really held my attention.
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nadyne.richmond | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 6, 2013 |
Thoroughly entertaining. The author has a style reminiscent of James Burke narrating the television series "Connections". I actually found myself laughing out loud at times, and it's a serious book. Despite that, the text is well researched and referenced with thirty-five pages of notes and bibliography. I was surprised to learn how much of scientific debate is really petty quarrelling and personality chafing. Looking back on it, I wonder why I was surprised. Regardless, there is a fair amount of actual science bandied back and forth, but it's not at a level that would jam an averagely intelligent person.

One bone to pick, though -- the last page of text. If the end of the chapter weren't on the recto of the leaf, I'd advise you to rip the page out entirely. The author advocates resolution by committee and not necessarily by a group of experts in the questioned field. It closes what otherwise was a very interesting read with drivel. I would have given the book a 4 star rating, but that Epilogue killed it.
… (mehr)
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WholeHouseLibrary | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 26, 2009 |

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Statistikseite

Werke
33
Mitglieder
496
Beliebtheit
#49,831
Bewertung
½ 3.6
Rezensionen
6
ISBNs
38
Sprachen
6

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