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Great Feuds in Science : Ten of the Liveliest Disputes Ever

Great Feuds in Science : Ten of the Liveliest Disputes Ever

List Price: $16.95
Your Price: $11.53
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: For the most part entertaining and informative
Review: And enormously enjoyable. The chapter on Galileo vs. Pope is worth the book. Amazing how I, an Italian, only got a full understanding of that story and its background from a book by an American.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: excellent popular debunking of "story book" science history
Review: Hellman presents us with a well written and carefully researched series of entertaining profiles about some notable debates in science (both old and current). These are informative and fun to read, but perhaps their greatest value for lay readers is in revealing the all-too human sides of the combatants. This discredits the "Story Book" version of science so often given in texts wherein noble scientists are portrayed as unblemished heroes fighting to bring light into the darkness against a purely non-scientific opposition. Here we see that even great scientists often squabble with one another and that they seldom epitomize rationality and objectivity.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Light on Science, plenty of Emotion
Review: I had mixed emotions about this book. There wasn't that much deep insight into the underlying science or philosophy under debate, so it was sometimes hard to decide whose side I might have been on?
It did focus on showing the emotional side of the combatants, which makes them all too human, but also disappoints because it showed how emotions & personality got in the way of the facts, and as Scientists one always thinks that the 'facts' will transcend mere human frailties? But this book shows them all too plainly.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hellman's "Great Feuds ..." is great reading!
Review: I have to disagree strongly with one of the customer reviews of Hal Hellman's "Great Feuds in Science." "Iceage" complains that "... the book dissapoints (sic)... mainly because of its lack of first person perspeective. I was looking for more feeling, more virulent attacking by two historical giants ..." Apparently the reviewer was expecting people like Newton and Leibniz or Thomas Hobbes and John Wallis to stand head to head yelling four-letter words at each other. We should be fair: these feuds are scientific battles, not barroom brawls. As for his complaint that he "was hoping for more of a graphic and detailed picture of the opposition ..." I found Hellman's examples apt and intriguing. One example: John Wallis, mathematician and clergyman, writes to a colleague about Hobbes: "... nor should we be deterred ... by his arrogance which we know will vomit poisonous filth against us." In Chapter 10, Hellman r! elates that Derek Freeman, Australian anthropologist, wrote of that American icon, Maargaret Mead, that many of her assertions about Samoa, made decades earlier, are " ... fundamentally in error and some are preposterously false." Also, "There isn't another example of such wholesale self-deception in the history of the behavioral sciences." These aren't four-letter words, but they are explosive. Hellman has given us that good feel for who these people were and what they meant to society at the time. This book could bring science to life for the young and those of us who are more experienced. Iceage missed the boat but your readers should jump on board.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A new approach to popularizing science
Review: I suppose it is an eternal effort to try to bring science to the public in an interesting way. Hellman, who according to the blurb has written 26 other popular science books, takes the tack of presenting various controversies in science, of which there are a depressing number.

Hellman picks ten, most of which are fairly well-known: Galileo vs. the Church, Newton vs. Leibniz, and so on. He springboards off of these to various extents to present the science behind the controversies or at least the history thereof. In particular, he takes the Darwinism vs. creationism issue up to the present day, even mentioning Behe and Darwin's Black Box. Other controversies are inherently recent: Donald Johanson vs. Richard Leakey on mankind's family tree and Derek Freeman's issues with Margaret Mead. (I have to side with Mead on the latter, at least as the situation is presented here. Freeman comes across as an opportunist looking for a way to gain publicity more than as a seeker after truth.)

It's lightweight if sometime saddening reading, particularly in such cases as Lord Kelvin, whose successes were undeniable but whose lack of flexibility hindered the progress of science at times.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Highly readable; intelligent, fascinating non-fiction
Review: In the final chapter of his wonderful book "Great Feuds in Science" Hall Hellman speaks of Margaret Mead's study of Samoans: "One of her innovations was writing in a way that the public could understand." Hellman does the same. This book is "written in a way that the public can understand." It is sober without being sour, intelligent without being intimidating and scholarly without being stifling. From the moment we meet Galileo who was forced to recant his revolutionary conclusions by the urban Pope Urban VIII, to our final visit with Margaret Mead, Hellman holds us in literary thrall. Reading this book I was reminded of the memorable "Microbe Hunters" by Paul de Kruif. This wonderfully various author, like de Kruif, combines a dazzling understanding of science as well as the scientists with an usually graceful style of writing. For the reader, Hellman's extensive research opens a window on the usually opaque walls of statistics ! ! and experimental results and makes it all surprisingly palatable - especially when his punctuates his prose (as he often does) with humor and humanity. I highly recommend this book to anyone who knows the truth - that non-fiction, well written, has all the romance, passion and excitement as a best-selling novel. And for any non-believers, apologists, amateur scientists and "nosey parkers" who would like to pursue the characters (and they were!) in even more depth, Hellman provides extensive notes, a superb bibliography, and a helpful index.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good, rather light, informative
Review: More than a "popular science" book, GREAT FEUDS IN SCIENCE touches a number of disciplines, including philosophy, religion, politics, and sociology. Hence, this book has a fairly wide, if not universal, scope. While his writing is not what I would call distinguished, Hellman is skilled at cutting corners and providing reasonably accurate portraits of these feuding scientists and thinkers, as well as neat summaries of their hypotheses (and world views, biases, nasty streaks, and the like). This is easy reading; any reasonably intelligent 16-year old will get through the book with no problem, and they'll be better off, more informed, for having done so. So while this book may not be an important source for someone writing a paper for a physics dissertation, it will be helpful for anyone wanting a little more than an encyclopedia entry on why, say, Newton or Darwin, is important. Hellman wisely includes notes and a helpful bibliography for those who want more.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good, rather light, informative
Review: More than a "popular science" book, GREAT FEUDS IN SCIENCE touches a number of disciplines, including philosophy, religion, politics, and sociology. Hence, this book has a fairly wide, if not universal, scope. While his writing is not what I would call distinguished, Hellman is skilled at cutting corners and providing reasonably accurate portraits of these feuding scientists and thinkers, as well as neat summaries of their hypotheses (and world views, biases, nasty streaks, and the like). This is easy reading; any reasonably intelligent 16-year old will get through the book with no problem, and they'll be better off, more informed, for having done so. So while this book may not be an important source for someone writing a paper for a physics dissertation, it will be helpful for anyone wanting a little more than an encyclopedia entry on why, say, Newton or Darwin, is important. Hellman wisely includes notes and a helpful bibliography for those who want more.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Great zeitgeist, thin science
Review: Scientists are human, too. They have pride, turf, and overbearing egoes. This little book, with its chapters relating disagreements and outright feuds between scientific luminaries, shows how the March of Science rarely proceeds in lockstep. The fur flies the thickest in Newton versus Leibniz, concerning the invention and popularization of calculus. This is a good "sidebar" book, to go along with a more conventional history of science. The human drama within provides a couple of nights of good reading.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great book to read on vacation.
Review: This is simply a marvelous book. Period. I would enthusiastically recommend it to anyone who is looking for a stimulating, yet fairly easy read over a vacation, holiday, plane ride, whatever. Hellman's prose drew me in --and keep me in--. I normally have trouble finishing books. Not this one. This is one of those books that leaves you feeling better educated upon completion.


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