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December 2015 - Violinist's Thumb
By Betsy , co-mod · 32 posts · 87 views
By Betsy , co-mod · 32 posts · 87 views
last updated Jan 11, 2016 06:55AM
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November 2015 - Being Mortal
By Betsy , co-mod · 55 posts · 111 views
By Betsy , co-mod · 55 posts · 111 views
last updated Jun 25, 2016 03:15PM
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September 2023 - Vital Question
By Betsy , co-mod · 22 posts · 82 views
By Betsy , co-mod · 22 posts · 82 views
last updated Oct 05, 2023 10:41PM
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What is your most recently read science book? What did you think of it? Part 3
By Betsy , co-mod · 532 posts · 843 views
By Betsy , co-mod · 532 posts · 843 views
last updated Sep 02, 2025 02:26AM
What Members Thought

I really appreciate well-written books about science when they are written by active researchers in the field. And this book qualifies, as McFadden is a research biologist, and Al-Khalili is a theoretical physicist. They are both actively engaged in researching evidence for quantum phenomena that are responsible for complex biological mechanisms.
The book focuses on several important and difficult biology problems; photosynthesis, respiration, magnetoreception (bird migration), consciousness, gen ...more
The book focuses on several important and difficult biology problems; photosynthesis, respiration, magnetoreception (bird migration), consciousness, gen ...more

'Life on the Edge: The Coming of Age of Quantum Biology ' by Johnjoe McFadden is a wonderful book describing wonderful things.
Science is not my strongest area in learning, but this book makes clear an opaque part, to me, of physics which usually is understood through mathematics and specialized scientific equipment able to view or measure particles of atoms.
As a book written for the general reader, it does not have a lot of math, and it includes drawings which add clarity to the subject address ...more
Science is not my strongest area in learning, but this book makes clear an opaque part, to me, of physics which usually is understood through mathematics and specialized scientific equipment able to view or measure particles of atoms.
As a book written for the general reader, it does not have a lot of math, and it includes drawings which add clarity to the subject address ...more

3.5
In general I love reading about the smallest processes in biology or physics. I could read an entire book on the inner life of the mitochondria's electron transport chain, and I would be enthralled. I find it pretty exciting when authors want to understand the most in depth mechanisms at work in a each system. I love it even more if the authors take the knowledge they uncover and attempt to apply it to big systems, such as networks, systems biology, etc. The authors of tis book tried to do ju ...more
In general I love reading about the smallest processes in biology or physics. I could read an entire book on the inner life of the mitochondria's electron transport chain, and I would be enthralled. I find it pretty exciting when authors want to understand the most in depth mechanisms at work in a each system. I love it even more if the authors take the knowledge they uncover and attempt to apply it to big systems, such as networks, systems biology, etc. The authors of tis book tried to do ju ...more

Jan 26, 2015
Tatjana Rosandić
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