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Hidden Histories of Science de Robert B.…
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Hidden Histories of Science (edició 2003)

de Robert B. Silvers (Editor)

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2382113,558 (3.65)1
Exploring the ways that science is influenced by culture, Hidden Histories of Science highlights the misleading images that have distorted our view of the history of life. The contributors -- Stephen Jay Gould, Daniel J. Kevles, R. C. Lewontin, Jonathan Miller, and Oliver Sacks -- consider the neglect of useful ideas that do not fit the current intellectual fashion in science.… (més)
Membre:ILouro
Títol:Hidden Histories of Science
Autors:Robert B. Silvers
Informació:New York Review Books (2003), Paperback, 192 pages
Col·leccions:Read & on Goodreads, La teva biblioteca, Llista de desitjos, Llegint actualment, Per llegir, Llegit, però no el tinc
Valoració:****
Etiquetes:essay, history, science, Goodreads

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Hidden Histories of Science de Robert B. Silvers (Editor)

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Gould, Stephen Jay
  niklaus | Apr 5, 2012 |
This fine book collects essays by five men of science who are also excellent writers. The collective topic is how the history of science contains many cases where understanding has been temporarily lost, or strongly resisted.

The best essay is the last, by Oliver Sacks. Titled "Scotoma: Forgetting and Neglect in Science," it gives examples of many different situations leading to discoveries being ignored, rejected, or simply lost. Particularly he notes that while in the 19th century it was enough to describe, in the 20th it was necessary to explain, and so unfortunately only what was explainable was described.

Jonathan Miller is both a medical doctor and a stage director. "Going Unconscious" begins with Mesmer's 'discovery' of the unconscious in 18th Century. Miller explains that we are capable of many complex functions, such as walking, that don't require conscious direction, and that it is these functions which still available when hypnosis shuts down consciousness. This 'automatic self' is vital to the higher forms of intellection. But then Miller counters that this understanding was put aside when Freud's very different use of the idea of unconsciousness came to the fore, one whose purpose was to suppress disturbing thoughts and memories.

Stephen Jay Gould's "Ladders and Cones: Constraining Evolution by Canonical Icons" is not of his stronger essays. The heart of it is that the conventional images of 'the Ascent of Man' and 'the Tree of Life' are misleading enough to be considered inhibiting of our scientific imaginations.

In Daniel J. Kevles "Pursuing the Unpopular: A History of Courage, Viruses, and Cancer," he traces our growing understanding of certain causes of cancer, that some are caused by viruses (noting retroviruses as a significant special case), and how these viruses turn healthy cells cancerous. But it is not a routine story of progressive discovery; he writes: "It is difficult to think of another case of scientific advance where almost every one of the key pioneers encountered pointed resistance from his community of peers."

R. C. Lewontin's "Genes, Environment, and Organisms" suggests that the last 50 years have transformed Biology so that it is closer to a 'hard' science, such as physics, but that it has lost the signifcant perception that organisms and their environments can only be understood interdependently
1 vota grunin | Feb 20, 2006 |
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Nom de l'autorCàrrecTipus d'autorObra?Estat
Silvers, Robert B.Editorautor primaritotes les edicionsconfirmat
Gould, Steven JayCol·laboradorautor secundaritotes les edicionsconfirmat
Kevles, Daniel J.Col·laboradorautor secundaritotes les edicionsconfirmat
Lewontin, R. C.Col·laboradorautor secundaritotes les edicionsconfirmat
Miller, JonathanCol·laboradorautor secundaritotes les edicionsconfirmat
Sacks, OliverCol·laboradorautor secundaritotes les edicionsconfirmat

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Exploring the ways that science is influenced by culture, Hidden Histories of Science highlights the misleading images that have distorted our view of the history of life. The contributors -- Stephen Jay Gould, Daniel J. Kevles, R. C. Lewontin, Jonathan Miller, and Oliver Sacks -- consider the neglect of useful ideas that do not fit the current intellectual fashion in science.

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