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The upright thinkers : the human journey from living in trees to understanding the cosmos

Title
The upright thinkers : the human journey from living in trees to understanding the cosmos / Leonard Mlodinow.
ISBN
9780307908230 (hard cover : alk. paper)
0307908232 (hard cover : alk. paper)
9780307908247 (e-book)
0307908240 (e-book)
Publication
New York : Pantheon Books, 2015.
Copyright Notice Date
©2015
Physical Description
viii, 340 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
June 03, 2015
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Our drive to know; A starving man's hunger for knowledge. The human odyssey of discovery
Curiosity; Lizards don't ask questions. From handy man to wise man. What infants ask, but chimps don't
Culture; Humanity's first church. Knowledge, ideas, and values go viral. Human and primate culture
Civilization; From the Savannah to Uruk. How the charms and headaches of neighbors led to the new arts of writing and arithmetic. The invention of law, from peasant: "don't vomit in streams" to planet: "don't stray from your orbit"
Reason; Bad crops and angry gods. A new framework for looking at the world. The mystery of change and the tyranny of common sense. Aristotle, the one-man Wikipedia
A new way to reason; Trusting your eyes over your ancestors. Castrated boars and universal laws of motion. The tactless Professor Galileo
The mechanical universe; The good, the bad, and the ugly: Isaac Newton. The bet that turned Newton from alchemy to authoring the greatest scientific treatise ever written. The force of Newtonian thinking
What things are made of; From embalming to alchemy. The similarities between burning and breathing. Lavoisier loses his head. Mendeleev and his periodic table
The animate world; Cells and the complexity of life. A recipe for making mice and the revolution of the microscope. Tragedy, illness, and Darwin's secret research
The limits of human experience; The billion billion tiny universes in a drop of water. Cracks in the Newtonian worldview. Accepting an unseeable reality. Planck and Einstein invent the quantum
The invisible realm; The insights of a dreamer. The crazy ideas of a pale and modest young man. The early quantum laws, "awful nonsense, bordering on fraud"
The quantum revolution; Heisenberg's new physics. The bizarre reality of the quantum universe. The empowering and humbling legacy of a new science
Epilogue; The advance of human understanding as a succession of fantasies; the importance of critical and innovative thinking; Where we are and where we are going.
Subjects
Citation

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