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What science book is your most recent read? What do you think about it? Pt. 1
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David
(last edited Sep 02, 2012 07:15PM)
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Sep 02, 2012 03:49PM

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Dr. Leonardo Noto
www.leonardonoto.com

Cheers,
Aaron

As I stated in the review, once he goes on land he sticks with the vertebrates and doesn't have anything to say about plants or insects. Perhaps these two great families deserve their own books. Can anyone recommend good books on plant or insect evoltion? Also, how about a good book for the lay reader on systematics and cladistics?

As I stated in the review, once he goes on la..."
Thanks for the review. I would have looked for the book.

I just finished reading Isaac Asimov's book, Roving Mind. If you have never read one of Asimov's nonfiction books, this one is a great place to start. It is a collection of short essays, many of which are speculations about the future. Since he wrote them in the late 70's and early 80's, it is fascinating to see which of predictions have been proven to be correct, and which ones are dead-wrong. Here is my review.

I had a similar reaction after reading his
The Collapsing Universe, which takes the reader on a tour of the least dense to the most dense material in the universe, explained so clearly as only Asimov could do.

As I stated in the review, once he goes on la..."
The only thing in my library about insects is a non-lay book. It is a behemoth of a text and quite technical unfortunately.


http://newbooksinbrief.wordpress.com/...
Cheers,
Aaron

"The Baldwin Effect is kind of a fascinating idea - that mind can direct evolution. This notion was supposedly laid to rest with the disgrace of Lamarck, but Baldwin (and others) may have found a loophole. We all know the apocryphal interpretation of giraffe neck evolution as presented by Lamarck - by striving to reach leaves on higher branches, early giraffes supposedly stretched their necks and these changes were then passed on to their offspring. The germ/soma distinction, as well as some conclusive experiments involving cutting the tails off many a poor rat (and finding that their offspring had no shorter tails) laid that mechanism to rest.
However, consider this: at some point in the past there were antelope-like precursors to giraffes. If none of those antelope creatures had ever decided to reach for the higher leaves, natural selection would have had nothing to operate on to select for longer necks. Much like Waddington's notion of "genetic assimilation" (another very cool idea, now accepted but beyond the scope of this review), it was the behavior (read: minds) of these giraffe precursors striving for the higher leaves that exposed the genetic variation already existing to the action of natural selection, thus opening up a new channel for evolutionary development.
That's a crude example of the process and this book contains many more sophisticated and interesting treatments, but I think it illustrates the main point - behavior can "lead the way" for genetic modification to follow. We can certainly think of definitive cases where this has been the case. Domestication of plants and animals comes to mind, as well as our own "domestication" since the invention of agriculture. That's not to mention the explicitly mind-directed evolution that is resulting from our conscious use of genetic engineering.
This book provides a good introduction to the Baldwin effect, though it's quite technical and some essays are more convincing than others. As usual, Terry Deacon's star shines and his two contributions are the best in the collection. Read anything by him for a methamphetamine jolt of cerebral wonder."
Evolution and Learning: The Baldwin Effect Reconsidered

I just finished reading The Link: Uncovering Our Earliest Ancestor by Colin Tudge. The book centers around the discovery of "Ida", the oldest primate fossil ever discovered, a skeleton that is almost complete. When discussing Ida, the book is fascinating. But, much of the book is far too detailed for me to completely understand. Here is my review.

Here's my review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

http://newbooksinbrief.wordpress.com/...
Cheers,
Aaron

A lot of scientists feel like that..."
I'm halfway through "How the Hippies Saved Physics" by David Kaiser, which is about the contributions to quantum mechanics (specifically quantum entanglement) by a group of "New Age" physicists who were dissatisfied with the "shut up and calculate" approach of the physics establishment of the time (which was itself a reaction to the philosophical / interpretive approach of the previous generation). This was definitely a far out group of people, but I can see how their unconventional thinking was indispensable to moving forward with something so weird as quantum mechanics. (And he's dropped hints about their contributions to higher-dimensional physics, but so far hasn't focused on that.) The group got a fair amount of popular exposure in the '70's and apparently not much credence amongst "serious" scientists, but the author seems to be building a decent case that we wouldn't be talking about (potentially) practical things like quantum cryptography if it wasn't for these philosophical (and more than a little nutty) physicists. Folks who remember the '70's might already be familiar with the physicists in question (Elizabeth Rauscher et al.)
It's easy to scoff at a lot of the ideas they put forward and hoaxes they bought into, but in amongst the non-sense were some important gems that more credible thinkers probably never would have dreamed up. I don't want to give the impression that these folks were just abstract thinkers; they were genuine theoretical and experimental physicists armed with equations and laboratories, and like anyone, some of their ideas held up to testing and some didn't.
Anyway, I find it an interesting take on the necessity for philosophy (or "interpretive" thinking) along side science.
I just finished reading 1434 The Year a Magnificent Chinese Fleet Sailed to Italy and Ignited the Renaissance. It is a wonderfully original book based on reams of evidence, that a Chinese fleet reached Italy in 1434. The ships were stocked with massive encyclopedias, learned scientists and scholars, and weapons, and exerted a great influence on the Renaissance. Here is my review.

http://newbooksinbrief.com/2012/10/15...
Cheers,
Aaron

You've sold me on that, James. It does sound good. I've read his 'God Delusion' and 'The Selfish Gene', and can heartily recommend both, although the latter does get a little drawn out towards the end with the 'Prisoner' game.
I just abandoned The Quantum Universe, by Brian Cox and Jeff Forshaw, due to the focus on mathematics and some very vague explanations on equations. Although I'm fascinated by the sub-atomic world, I'm uncertain about quantum mechanics (geeky joke).
If I can hold out one book to everyone here, it would have to be Bill Bryson's A Short History Of Nearly Everything, which is a fascinating exploration into the origins of all the sciences.
Any recommendations for books on theoretical physics, particularly black holes/warp holes?
Aaron wrote: "Just finished reading the New York Times bestseller 'The Signal and the Noise: Why So Many Predictions Fail--but Some Don't' by Nate Silver. The book explores the factors that complicate forecastin..."
Sounds interesting, Aaron. A while ago I read the book
The Predictioneer's Game: Using the Logic of Brazen Self-Interest to See and Shape the Future. Although the book really is a self-serving, self-advertisement for the author, it is very thought provoking. The author claims that a model that he developed allows him (and his students) to reliably predict political events.
Sounds interesting, Aaron. A while ago I read the book
The Predictioneer's Game: Using the Logic of Brazen Self-Interest to See and Shape the Future. Although the book really is a self-serving, self-advertisement for the author, it is very thought provoking. The author claims that a model that he developed allows him (and his students) to reliably predict political events.



http://newbooksinbrief.com/2012/10/30...
Cheers,
Aaron

Cheers,
Aaron
Aaron wrote: "Just finished reading Thinking, Fast and Slow by the grandfather of behavioral economics Daniel Kahneman. The book breaks down thinking into two systems: intuition and deliberation, and explores th..."
I agree Aaron, it's a very good book. I especially enjoy books by people who are truly experts in the subject. The thorough understanding of the subject shines through, and the explanations really ring true, especially when written as well as this one is!
I agree Aaron, it's a very good book. I especially enjoy books by people who are truly experts in the subject. The thorough understanding of the subject shines through, and the explanations really ring true, especially when written as well as this one is!


Here's my review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

Cheers,
Aaron
I've just finished reading Turing's Cathedral: The Origins of the Digital Universe. Despite the title, this excellent book is really about the construction of the first electronic computers at the Institute of Advanced Studies at Princeton, and the search for scientific problems that could be attacked by computers. It features a number of people who worked in this area, principally John von Neumann. Here is my review.

I am reading a book on energy called the Quest. It has a John von Neumann story in it. A young math PhD approached Neumann at a rail station and was having a pleasant conversation when Neumann asked him what he was working on. He said he was working on helping build an electronic calculating device that could do 300 multiplications per second. The conversation stopped being pleasant and became a PhD thesis defense at once! The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World



Patricrk wrote: "I just finished
by Daniel Yergin over 1500 pages on my e-reader but if you want to be informed about the energ..."
Patricrk, I enjoyed reading that book, too. I found it to be very comprehensive.

Patricrk, I enjoyed reading that book, too. I found it to be very comprehensive.




Here's my review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

I love that book! I also love Eiseleys The Immense Journey with is half-a-century out of date but the writing and the insights are so profound it goes way beyond the raw science and is very much still relevant.
The Immense Journey: An Imaginative Naturalist Explores the Mysteries of Man and Nature



It is, indeed :)

Cheers,
Aaron

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

We read The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks as a group read in April 2011. As you said, it was fascinating, but maddening.
I just finished reading The Third Chimpanzee: The Evolution & Future of the Human Animal by Jared Diamond. Like Diamond's other books, it is filled with speculation--but it is fascinating and very entertaining. Here is my review.

It was maddening to me how much the book focused on the attitudes of surviving family members who didn't even remember their mother as well as the irrelevant social pathologies in that family and Skoots struggle to draw out their story. That Johns Hopkins never made any profit off the HeLa cells is buried in the story, so the righteous indignation gets misplaced.
The book did do a good job on the value of the cell line and on the origins of informed consent for use of one's cells.

Am eager to get my hands on Diamond's The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn from Traditional Societies?.


David, from your review it sounds as though 3rd Chimp covers some of the same territory as the book we're reading this month. Are you reading it and do you have any thoughts about their relative merits?
Steve wrote: "David wrote: "I just finished reading The Third Chimpanzee: The Evolution & Future of the Human Animal by Jared Diamond. Like Diamond's other books, it is filled with speculation--but it is fascina..."
Yes, there is a bit of overlap. But the emphasis is entirely different between the two books. The emphasis in
The Tell-Tale Brain: A Neuroscientist's Quest for What Makes Us Human is on neuroscience, and on experiments that give clues about how the brain works. The emphasis in The Third Chimpanzee: The Evolution & Future of the Human Animal is more about trying to understand human behavior, by figuring out what evolutionary advantage these behaviors gave to our ancestors.
Yes, there is a bit of overlap. But the emphasis is entirely different between the two books. The emphasis in
The Tell-Tale Brain: A Neuroscientist's Quest for What Makes Us Human is on neuroscience, and on experiments that give clues about how the brain works. The emphasis in The Third Chimpanzee: The Evolution & Future of the Human Animal is more about trying to understand human behavior, by figuring out what evolutionary advantage these behaviors gave to our ancestors.
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