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Rating: Summary: Potpourri of interesting ideas, but solid background needed! Review: "A glorious accident" is not an easy book... Five leading experts talking about some of the most profound subjects available(consciousness, evolution, the Brain...). It takes quite a lot of background to understand everything that is being said. The fact that these are just transcriptions of interviews and a discussion doesn't make it easier: compared to a normal "book", the ideas presented are not as structured and there's no room for background information to introduce readers in complex matters like Witgensteins philosophy or "orthogenesis" and "epistothisandthat". If Descartes, Newton, Heisenberg, Galileo, Montaigne, Darwin, Dirac, Kant, Turing, Aristoteles or Maxwell are completely unknown to you, this is not YOUR kind of book. :-)In 1991, I saw parts of the original television series. A few years later I read the Dutch printed version for the first time at the age of 20. Now (1999) I've read it again, and there are still quite a few passages where I'm totally lost in space . Now I don't have a degree in philosophy or physics, but still I have a healthy interest in these issues. Not enough to constantly keep in touch with 5 leading experts discussing without holding back..What is nice about this book, is that you can "grow with it". In around 2005, I'll read it for the 3th time and no doubt I'll conquer some more dark areas. The "interview" approach also gives quite a good impression of the personalities of these five extraordinary men. Sacks is still like a little child that has preserved his ability to wonder about all and everything. You just CAN'T bore this guy because he always finds an interesting approach! Gould is my absolute favourite. Because his ideas appeal to me, and because he is so totally "no-nonsense". Sheldrake is the rebellion with his heart in the right place. Dyson is the quiet one with the hidden powers. Dennett is so self-confident that it looks almost as if he can force reality to comply to his theories instead of the other way round. Toulmin is a bit too literate for my taste: he always gave me the feeling that I was a few steps behind. Not good for the ego All in all I would say that the book lacks structure because of the interview approach, but there are still more than enough interesting bits of original ideas and insight to make it worthwile. Jo Helsen Antwerp, Belgium
Rating: Summary: Potpourri of interesting ideas, but solid background needed! Review: A wonderful read for the philosopher scientist, or anyone interested in the question of mind vs. brain and how it all came about. It will lead you to further explorations of the works of the participants. Time well spent.
Rating: Summary: Surprisingly disappointing! Review: I would have thought such an assemblege would offer a penetrating debate,fencing, interweaving,deconstructing and reconstructing each other,and all the time illuminating. Instead I found a bunch of men talking at each other .
Rating: Summary: Enjoy Brilliant Words of Great Minds! Review: Wim Kayzer interviewed six great thinkers: the psychiatrist and neurologist Oliver Sacks, the philosopher Daniel C. Dennett, the paleontologist and evolutionary theorist Stephen Jay Gould, the physicist Freeman Dyson, the biochemist Rupert Sheldrake, and the historian and philosopher of science Stephen Toumlin. Then all of them participated in a round table to discuss the deep and 'unanswerable" questions mainly related to our consciousness. The content of this book was originally broadcast as a television series. In general one expects to get more systematic information from a book on science or philosophy of science than from a television program on the same topic, but naturally we cannot have this expectation for a book produced from a television program. Further, when an interview or round-table program is put into printed lines, the discursiveness of spoken words comes to the surface, and the program is apt to lose some of exciting flavors present in broadcasting. This book is not an exception of this phenomenon, and thus is good only for casual enjoyment but not good for obtaining substantial knowledge. Reading carefully, nevertheless, one can find some brilliant words of the great minds here and there.
Rating: Summary: Enjoy Brilliant Words of Great Minds! Review: Wim Kayzer interviewed six great thinkers: the psychiatrist and neurologist Oliver Sacks, the philosopher Daniel C. Dennett, the paleontologist and evolutionary theorist Stephen Jay Gould, the physicist Freeman Dyson, the biochemist Rupert Sheldrake, and the historian and philosopher of science Stephen Toumlin. Then all of them participated in a round table to discuss the deep and 'unanswerable" questions mainly related to our consciousness. The content of this book was originally broadcast as a television series. In general one expects to get more systematic information from a book on science or philosophy of science than from a television program on the same topic, but naturally we cannot have this expectation for a book produced from a television program. Further, when an interview or round-table program is put into printed lines, the discursiveness of spoken words comes to the surface, and the program is apt to lose some of exciting flavors present in broadcasting. This book is not an exception of this phenomenon, and thus is good only for casual enjoyment but not good for obtaining substantial knowledge. Reading carefully, nevertheless, one can find some brilliant words of the great minds here and there.
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