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Seeing Further电子书

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作       者:Bryson, Bill

出  版  社:HarperCollins e-books

出版时间:2010-11-09

字       数:71.3万

所属分类: 进口书 > 外文原版书 > 小说

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This revised e-book features all photographs, designed in beautiful full-color. Edited and introduced by Bill Bryson, with original contributions from "a glittering array of scientific writing talent" (Sunday Observer ) including Richard Dawkins, Margaret Atwood, Richard Holmes, Martin Rees, Richard Fortey, Steve Jones, James Gleick, and Neal Stephenson, among others, this incomparable book tells the spectacular story of science and the international Royal Society, from 1660 to the present. Seeing Further is also gorgeously illustrated with photographs, documents, and treasures from the Society's exclusive archives. On a damp weeknight in November three hundred and fifty years ago, a dozen men gathered in London. After hearing an obscure twenty-eight-year-old named Christopher Wren lecture on the wonders of astronomy, his rapt audience was moved to create a society to promote the accumulation of useful and fascinating knowledge. At that, the Royal Society was born, and with it, modern science. Since then, the Royal Society has pioneered global scientific exploration and discovery. Its members have split the atom, discovered the double helix and the electron, and given us the computer and the World Wide Web. Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin, Albert Einstein, Robert Hooke, Robert Boyle, Joseph Banks, Humphry Davy, John Locke, Alexander Fleming, Stephen Hawking all have been fellows. Bill Bryson's favorite fellow is the Reverend Thomas Bayes, a brilliant mathematician who devised Bayes' theorem. Its complexity meant that it had little practical use in Bayes' own lifetime, but today his theorem is used for weather forecasting, astrophysics, and even stock-market analysis. A milestone in mathematical history, it exists only because the Royal Society decided to preserve it just in case. Truly global in its outlook, the Royal Society now is credited with creating modern science. Seeing Further is an unprecedented celebration of its history and the power of ideas, bringing together the very best of science writing.
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Cover

Title Page

Contents

Bill Bryson

Introduction

Acknowledgments

James Gleick

At the Beginning: More things in Heaven and Earth

Margaret Atwood

Of the Madness of Mad Scientists: Jonathan Swift’s Grand Academy

Margaret Wertheim

Lost Inspace: The Spititual Crisis of Newtonian Cosmology

Neal Stephenson

Atoms of Cognition: Metaphysics in the Royal Society, 1715–2010

Rebecca Newberger Goldstein

What’s in a Name? Rivalries and the Birth of Modern Science

Simon Schaffer

Charged Atmospheres: Promethean Science and the Royal Society

Richard Holmes

A New Age of Flight: Joseph Banks Goes Ballooning

Richard Fortey

Archives of Life: Science and Collections

Richard Dawkins

Darwin’s Five Bridges: The Way to Natural Selection

Henry Petroski

Images of Progress: Conferences of Engineers

Georgina Ferry

X-Ray Visions: Structural Biologists and Social Action in the Twentieth Century

Steve Jones

Ten Thousand Wedges: Biodiversity, Natural Selection and Random Change

Philip Ball

Making Stuff: From Bacon to Bakelite

Paul Davies

Just Typical: Our Changing Place in the Universe

Ian Stewart

Behind the Scenes: The Hidden Mathematics that Rules our World

John D. Barrow

Simple, Really: From Simplicity to Complexity – and Back Again

Oliver Morton

Globe and Sphere, Cycles and Flows: How to see the World

Maggie Gee

Beyond Ending: Looking into the Void

Stephen H. Schneider

Confidence, Consensus and the Uncertainty Cops: Tackling Risk Management in Climate Change

Gregory Benford

Time: The Winged Chariot

Martinrees

Conclusion: Looking Fifty Years Ahead

Further Reading

List of Illustrations

Index

About the Author

Also by Bill Bryson

Copyright

About the Publisher

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