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Books > Reference & Interdisciplinary > Encyclopaedias & reference works > General encyclopaedias
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Know This - Today's Most Interesting and Important Scientific Ideas, Discoveries, and Developments (Paperback)
Loot Price: R459
Discovery Miles 4 590
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Know This - Today's Most Interesting and Important Scientific Ideas, Discoveries, and Developments (Paperback)
Series: Edge Question Series
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Loot Price R459
Discovery Miles 4 590
Expected to ship within 18 - 22 working days
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Today's most visionary thinkers reveal the cutting-edge scientific
ideas and breakthroughs you must understand. Scientific
developments radically change and enlighten our understanding of
the world -- whether it's advances in technology and medical
research or the latest revelations of neuroscience, psychology,
physics, economics, anthropology, climatology, or genetics. And yet
amid the flood of information today, it's often difficult to
recognize the truly revolutionary ideas that will have lasting
impact. In the spirit of identifying the most significant new
theories and discoveries, John Brockman, publisher of Edge.org
("The world's smartest website" -- The Guardian), asked 198 of the
finest minds What do you consider the most interesting recent
scientific news? What makes it important? Pulitzer Prize-winning
author of Guns, Germs, and Steel Jared Diamond on the best way to
understand complex problems * author of Seven Brief Lessons on
Physics Carlo Rovelli on the mystery of black holes * Harvard
psychologist Steven Pinker on the quantification of human progress
* TED Talks curator Chris J. Anderson on the growth of the global
brain * Harvard cosmologist Lisa Randall on the true measure of
breakthrough discoveries * Nobel Prize-winning physicist Frank
Wilczek on why the twenty-first century will be shaped by our
mastery of the laws of matter * philosopher Rebecca Newberger
Goldstein on the underestimation of female genius * music legend
Peter Gabriel on tearing down the barriers between imagination and
reality * Princeton physicist Freeman Dyson on the surprising
ability of small (and cheap) upstarts to compete with
billion-dollar projects. Plus Nobel laureate John C. Mather, Sun
Microsystems cofounder Bill Joy, Wired founding editor Kevin Kelly,
psychologist Alison Gopnik, Genome author Matt Ridley, Harvard
geneticist George Church, Why Does the World Exist? author Jim
Holt, anthropologist Helen Fisher, and more.
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