Rating:  Summary: Check the sell-by-date first Review: A fascinating subject for a study, but one that could be treated in many different, less speculative and more informative ways. After reading Peter Ackroyd's 'The Plato Papers' I found the Bronowski's initial chapters difficult to swallow. From mere scraps of available evidence from thousands of years ago, Bronowski paints vivid pictures of the development of early thought. Sure, they can make for intersting reading - but are best taken with a pinch of salt.
All the old canonical bores are rehearsed here (e.g. the 'Copernican revolution', Galileo as martyr to science), which makes for an easy, predictable read.
This book really should offer nothing new to readers with a reasonable grounding in history - in fact quite the opposite, may even seem dated in the light of more recent findings and revisions (not to mention writers who think things through: Why is Galileo a martyr to science? Didn't he dogmatically defend Copernicus and ignore Kepler? And didn't Copernicus simply re-introduce ideas that were discovered 'scientifically' by the Pythagoreans and abandoned when Plato and Aristotle all but throttled empirical science?).
I don't agree with the subtext book at all. Do people still think that science is the culmination of human development? No - it's a view that's been seriously in question since the creation of the atom bomb. And today creationism is making a firm comeback, genetically modified foods are treated with suspicion, futurists are terrified of nanotechnology... It's a whole different world, and one that Bronowski's book does nothing to prepare us for - and this would be my main argument for looking on, beyond this doubtless classic but seriously tired book.
Rating:  Summary: excellent Review: a must read for any educated individual. it shows the cultural context of human evolution which gave Homo Sapiens its uniqueness emphasizing the remarkable achievments in science and technology. this book teaches a modern person to reflect on the meaning and values of the long history around mankind and extract useful lessons.
Rating:  Summary: intriguing and well arranged Review: As a senior in high school, I was not looking forward to reading Ascent of Man. Yet (as a lover of the sciences) I was suprised and pleased to find it very interesting.Bronowski takes man from his beginnings as homo erectus and progresses through all the characteristics that make man great: his ingenuity, his pride in his skills, his reasoning ability.....Bronowski's subjects range from architecture to the atomic bomb, yet are presented in a semi-chronological and understandable format, each a detailed and thoughtful essay. Bronowski, weaving in a mixture of art and evolution, paints a poetic, thoughtful, and authoritative view of the ascent of man.
Rating:  Summary: On the human aspect and impact of the quest for knowledge Review: I grew in my teens watching, rerun after rerun, Jacob Bronowski's TV series "The Ascent of Man", from which I took my love for science; science as a very human activity, beautifully described by Mr Bronowski, and his words have well resisted the test of time as I read this book based on the series, and which I inevitably lend to anyone I know who have a thirst for the adventure of knowledge.
Rating:  Summary: This book touches your heart and your mind Review: I was telling a friend about this book when I realized I had never reviewed it. I searched for it on this site specifically to write a review: I had the good fortune to take a class in high school based almost entirely on this book. It started me on an intellectual and spiritual journey that will probably last my whole life. It's not a religious book, quite to the contrary. But when we get down to it, science and religion are both ways of understanding the world, so here goes: After I realized that my beliefs about the world differed greatly from those of my family, I spent most of my teenage years being depressed and lost in the world. I had a hard time finding beauty in the world because I had been told all along that beauty came from a god I no longer believed in. But when I read this book, I began to understand that no matter what you believe, the world, math, art--they're all beautiful in and of themselves. Perhaps the most beautiful, and necessary, thing of all is our humanity. The Ascent of Man is the reason I became an anthropologist. (My most favorite chapter is Knowledge and Certainty.) It's a collection of essays starting with the physical evolution of humans and continuing through the development of technology, science, math, art, etc. to the present. There's a companion TV series--I actually cried during Knowledge and Certainty because it was touching in so many ways. Somehow JB manages to relate everything back to (and remind us of) our essential, necessary humanity. Beautiful.
Rating:  Summary: This book touches your heart and your mind Review: I was telling a friend about this book when I realized I had never reviewed it. I searched for it on this site specifically to write a review: I had the good fortune to take a class in high school based almost entirely on this book. It started me on an intellectual and spiritual journey that will probably last my whole life. It's not a religious book, quite to the contrary. But when we get down to it, science and religion are both ways of understanding the world, so here goes: After I realized that my beliefs about the world differed greatly from those of my family, I spent most of my teenage years being depressed and lost in the world. I had a hard time finding beauty in the world because I had been told all along that beauty came from a god I no longer believed in. But when I read this book, I began to understand that no matter what you believe, the world, math, art--they're all beautiful in and of themselves. Perhaps the most beautiful, and necessary, thing of all is our humanity. The Ascent of Man is the reason I became an anthropologist. (My most favorite chapter is Knowledge and Certainty.) It's a collection of essays starting with the physical evolution of humans and continuing through the development of technology, science, math, art, etc. to the present. There's a companion TV series--I actually cried during Knowledge and Certainty because it was touching in so many ways. Somehow JB manages to relate everything back to (and remind us of) our essential, necessary humanity. Beautiful.
Rating:  Summary: The Work of a Genius Review: Nowadays many different books have been written to explain the unfolding of humans and civilization. This book covers many great products and inventors instead of all the great wars. In the 1970s this was unique to the public. And this book is the template for those to follow.
The contents include:
* Lower than the Angles (evolution of the head)
* The Harvest of the Seasons (the pace of cultural evolution)
* The Grain in the Stone (blood group evidence of migration)
* The Hidden Structure (fire)
* The Music of the Spheres (the language of numbers)
* The Starry Messenger (the cycle of seasons)
* The majestic Clockwork (Kepler's laws)
* The Drive for Power (Everyday technology)
* The ladder of Creation (are other formulas of life possible?)
* World Within World (the periodic table)
* Knowledge of Certainty (There is no absolute knowledge)
* Generation upon generation (cloning of identical forms)
* The Long Childhood (The commitment of man)
I have the original hardback book, reference book, and study guide. The local library still has the original videotapes. You have to be an institution to purchase them. This is a humanities course at the local collage. An added plus was getting to actually go through the Watts Towers as a kid. This work does rings around "Connections" by James Burke ISBN: 0316116726 because it is the story of the people behind the connections.
I am not saying that this book replaces others, but that it has more to say with out resorting to today's sound byte system of writing.
Rating:  Summary: Evolution of knowledge Review: One of my all time favorite books from college that is definitely a keeper and still relevent after all these years. If you read each chapter and view the corresponding video text it produce sa truly amazing insight into the development of mankinds knowledge. Similiar in style to "Connections" it is quite possibly more engrossing. The book is a fascinating journey , written in a style that illuminates the darkest and distant passages of time with lucidity and foresight. My personal favorite chapter(6) was The Starry Messenger which was eventually about(like knowledge Bronowski builds on the past) Galileo and his relationship with the Catholic Church as a result of his theories.I love this book and the understanding it gave me to subjects I felt less than interested in. This book has the power to make even the most abstract and esoteric theories interesting. A beautiful book that puts all the knowledge of the past into perspective in an entertaining manner that can lead a young mind into areas of interest they may never have persued. The book is also full of richly detailed photographs, full color prints and other visual aids that further explain the topic duscussed.I would recommened this book for any young student in high school or approaching college who is even remotely interested in the connections between science and the evolution of mankind. A great gift idea for that budding scientist or historian on your list.
Rating:  Summary: Epiphany Review: Other reviews in the section may give you a good idea of the content of this book. I would rather give you an idea of the impact that Bronowski had on one life. When I was a small boy living in London over 25 years ago, my father used to take me to the Science Museum in South Kensington almost every Saturday to attend the afternoon lectures. One Saturday it was not a lecture that we attended but a film by a gentleman named Jacob Bronowski. I sat mesmorised by the episode of the 'Ascent of Man' that was shown that afternoon. I understood much of the science which was being discussed and already had a good grounding in the subject. But within the despcription of man's pursuit of understanding was a humanity that I had never experienced before. At the end of the film, Bronowski crouched by a pond in a concentration camp and scooped a handful of ashes from the pool of water and, fixing his steady eye on the camera, said, 'I beseech you in the bowels of Christ, consider you may be wrong'. Bronowski was quoting Cromwell, but in that brief moment was encapsulated the escence of science, humanity, art,and understanding. The Ascent of Man, in the 1970s an attempt to bring a deeper and wider understanding of science and humanity to the public, is now confined to Open University television schedules. The book remains available to all. It is a revelation. Bronowski was a giant. Read this book and you may come closer to an understanding of the world around you, but when you finally put it down, having formed an opinion,'consider you may be wrong'. As for me, I went on to study physics as a first degree and the arts as a higher degree. I share Bronowski's atheism but there is never a day that passes or an opinion I offer when I do not heed that advice and question the world around me.
Rating:  Summary: Is available on DVD Review: This series has been available on DVD for about 2 years or so from Ambrose Video. The price is high.
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