Eyewitness to Science
副标题: Scientists and writers illuminate natural phenomena from fossils to fractals
ISBN: 9780674287556
出版社: Harvard University Press
出版年: 1997-10
页数: 560
定价: $ 19.15
装帧: Paper cover
内容简介
Plotting the development of modern science from Leonardo da Vinci to Chaos Theory, John Carey chooses accounts by scientists themselves that are both elegant and arrestingly written. The classic science-writers are here: Darwin, Huxley, Fabre. So, too, are the luminaries of the late-twentieth-century genre of popular science-writing which, Carey argues, challenges contemporary poetry and fiction in its imaginative power.
作者简介
Amazon.com
In Eyewitness to Science John Carey has assembled more than 100 pieces of science writing into a kaleidoscopic tour of the field. As befits Carey's status as professor of English at Oxford University, some of the most interesting juxtapositions are between great scientists and great writers. For instance, J. B. Lamarck on "How the Giraffe Got Its Neck" is grouped with George Bernard Shaw's preface to Back to Methuselah and with a poem by U.S. poet laureate Richard Wilbur. Some of the more literary excerpts include John Updike on entropy, George Orwell on toads, and John Steinbeck on sea cucumbers.