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What science book is your most recent read? What do you think about it? Pt. 1
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Susanna - Censored by GoodReads
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Aug 11, 2010 12:20PM

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So if you are planning on working on a wetland any time soon, I can recommend this book.


I have Demon Haunted World but haven't read it yet, Heather; glad you liked it. His Varieties of Scientific Experience: A Personal View of the Search for God is one of my favorite books.
I've also read and enjoyed Roach's Stiff; I'll get to Packing For Mars at some point.

Heather wrote: "I just picked up Stiff by Roach and listened to her interview on the podcast Skepticality about her latest book Packing For Mars."
Heather, How did you like "Stiff"? I was thinking about listening to it, as an audiobook.
Heather, How did you like "Stiff"? I was thinking about listening to it, as an audiobook.

Heather, How did you like "Stiff"? I was thinkin..."
I actually haven't picked it up yet to read it...just bought it last weekend and am looking forward to reading it soon. But I hear that all of her books are funny and informative. Really looking forward to it!

The wife didn't like Spook as much - thought it was a lamer subject. I haven't read anything but Stiff.

Oh good. I think I'll wait till it's in paperback, but looking forward to it!







I'm looking forward to this one as well. I haven't read anything from him that I haven't thoroughly enjoyed!

tana wrote: "Temple Grandin's books "Animals make us human" and "Animals in translation" are also very interesting."
I really enjoyed "Animals in Translation". Quite an interesting point of view.
I really enjoyed "Animals in Translation". Quite an interesting point of view.
Kirsten wrote: "I'm working on How the Mind Works and eying one of Brian Greene's books."
Kirsten, how do you like "How the Mind Works"? (I plan to read it real soon.)
Kirsten, how do you like "How the Mind Works"? (I plan to read it real soon.)

He is. He basically wrote Hawking's new one (Grand Design) ten years ago.

He is. He basically wrote Hawking's new one (Grand Design) ten years ago."
His new book looks really good, too The Expanse of Reality: Parallel Universes and the Search for the Deep Laws of the Cosmos. Looks like this one comes out the end of January.


I'm really enjoying it. It goes quickly and he talks about a lot of things that I never really connected, but now that he mentions it, they make a lot of sense. I'll be very interested to hear what you think of it.
Do you guys recommend a particular Brian Greene book?



I managed to get through high school and earn my degree without taking it, but now grad schools are telling me it's time to bite the bullet, so I'll be taking it next semester.



That's a good one too. I have The Stuff of Thought: Language as a Window into Human Nature on my shelf to read at some point too. Pinker spoke at my freshman matriculation, and guest taught at my freshman colloquium which started my interest in reading his books.
1109068 Believe me, I can relate. I'm terrible at math. But I find theoretical physics really interesting; it just has to be explained to me in a form other than just equations.
I'm trying to like physics, I really am. I'm not terrible at math, but I do math differently. I arrive at the same answer as other people, but not the same way. It drives teachers nuts.


He is. He basically wrote Hawking's new one (Grand Design) ten years ago."
I loved The Elegant Universe and The Fabric of the Cosmos. I'm looking forward to reading his new one, The Hidden Reality.

If you're only at the stage where you're basically learning elementary (or Newtonian) mechanics, then you won't really use anything you've read in the higher level popular physics books. The ability to do that physics (well all physics really) is to build a mathematical model of the situation described, then use various mathematical techniques to arrive at the conclusion correctly. Some people are very good at building the mathematical model, some are good at math, but unless you can do both simultaneously Physics will be quite difficult.
If you're delving back to a high school physics level, which at my school is called General Physics, they'll approach most things conceptually and use rudimentary Algebra and Trigonometry. However, the next level after that is Calculus based Physics, which, if you haven't done anything with Vector Calculus could wind up making the whole thing very difficult to understand (it was for me when I took it without knowing Vector Calculus). Though you can still get by depending on how massively a school scales those classes... not sure if you'd be doing it at the graduate level. Graduate Level physics can be very involved stuff.

Now I'm really terrified.
I never have learned to subtract. I can get to the right answer, but I don't do it like everyone else.
We can have the alternative math club!

Calculus based physics was much more difficult for me, even having just completed three semesters of calculus.

Thanks, Daddy!
I got several books, actually, so I'm in the enviable position of picking and choosing what I want to read next. ::hugs self and new books::

I'm jealous, Susanna, my dad is allergic to books.

But my mother thinks we have 5000 books in our house! I don't think she's exaggerating.
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Books mentioned in this topic
Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers (other topics)Do No Harm: The People Who Amputate Their Perfectly Healthy Limbs, and the Doctors Who Help Them (other topics)
Spook: Science Tackles the Afterlife (other topics)
Packing for Mars: The Curious Science of Life in the Void (other topics)
The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Amy Stewart (other topics)Carl Sagan (other topics)
Edward O. Wilson (other topics)
Michael Capuzzo (other topics)
Daniel Yergin (other topics)
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