TheEdinburghBookshop, to books
@TheEdinburghBookshop@bookish.community avatar

#WhatWereReading : Joe enjoyed
Roger Highfield's Stephen Hawking: Genius at Work from DK Books, exploring his life through the objects in his study, from scientific papers to Monty Python memorabilia to photos from his cameoes in Star Trek and the Big Bang Theory.

#PopularScience #books #livres #science #StephenHawking #bookshops #librairies #ScienceBooks #RecommendedReading #NewReleases #bookstodon #RogerHighfield #ScienceMuseum

LordWoolamaloo, to books
@LordWoolamaloo@mastodon.scot avatar

Today's was an advance peek at Roger Highfield's forthcoming Science Museum/ DK Books release Stephen Hawking: Genius at Work, diving into his life & work through the objects from his old study, from academic papers to Monty Python records. (Publishing mid-March)

1sabelR, to SciComm

My new paper is out, and it’s #OpenAccess !🥳🎉🙌

This one’s a revamped #essay I wrote as part of my #scicomm major and explores the important, though overlooked, role of women in early Western #ScienceCommunication and #SciencePopularisation. 🌱📚👩‍🔬

I use #PriscillaWakefield as a case study, but she is one of many incredible science communicators of her time ! (see eg #JaneMarcet, #MariaEdgeworth ✨)

#popularscience #AcademicFedi

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/09636625231217015

appassionato, to books
@appassionato@mastodon.social avatar

What's Gotten Into You: The Story of Your Body's Atoms, From the Big Bang Through Last Night's Dinner

A wondrous, wildly ambitious, and vastly entertaining work of popular science that tells the awe-inspiring story of the elements that make up the human body, and how these building blocks of life travelled billions of miles and across billions of years to make us who we are.

@bookstodon
#books
#nonfiction
#PopularScience
#HumanBody
#atoms

appassionato, to books
@appassionato@mastodon.social avatar

We Have No Idea: A Guide to the Unknown Universe

'This witty book reveals the humbling vastness of our ignorance about the universe, along with charming insights into what we actually do understand' Carlo Rovelli, author of Seven Brief Lessons on Physics and Reality.

@bookstodon



itnewsbot, to magazine

End of an Era: Popular Science Shutters Magazine - Just three years after the iconic magazine abandoned its print version and went al... - https://hackaday.com/2023/11/30/end-of-an-era-popular-science-shutters-magazine/

fxdm, to science

For French and German speakers, Chloé Laubu and I are interviewed in a clever and funny TV documentary about fish cognition by ARTE.

📺 French version: https://www.arte.tv/fr/videos/105577-000-A/des-poissons-pas-si-cons/
📺 German version: https://www.arte.tv/de/videos/105577-000-A/fische-schlauer-als-gedacht/

victorgijsbers, to random
@victorgijsbers@mastodon.gamedev.place avatar

I finished "Kindred" by Rebecca Wragg Sykes, a dense 400-page book about Neanderthals. It's popular science, but on the 'serious' side of the spectrum. And it's amazing! I don't know whether to be more impressed by the Neanderthals -- to mention just one thing out of many, they developed very complex stone cutting technologies -- or by modern day archaeologists who manage to get incredible insights from what seem to be extremely meager remains. 1/2

Neurograce, to Neuroscience

If you are thinking about gifts (for yourself or others) today, I know of a certain paperback book coming out next week --- and it's on sale 😉

"Models of the Mind: How physics, engineering, and mathematics have shaped our understanding of the brain" https://bookshop.org/p/books/models-of-the-mind-how-physics-engineering-and-mathematics-have-shaped-our-understanding-of-the-brain/14353682

idoubtit, to science

100 Things Popular Science Thinks Science Got Wrong, but Didn’t Quite

I was in the grocery checkout line a few weeks ago. I sometimes scan the magazine rack impulse grabs but never buy them. This week, the crop circle cover photo of a special edition of Popular Science caught my attention: Mistakes and Hoaxes – 100 Things Science Got Wrong

https://sharonahill.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/screen-shot-2015-09-05-at-7-47-01-pm.png

What did science get wrong about crop circles? “Science” (be wary of the tone of generality used in the title) never assumed there was anything worthwhile about crop circles. They were a man-made (and quite nifty) phenomenon. Thumbing through the issue, I saw pages about phrenology, cigarettes are good for you, bloodletting, humans evolved from apes, and so on – topics that may appear to have once had scientific backing. But several other standard hoaxes were cited in the list – spirit photography, alien autopsy, Loch Ness Monster, King Tut’s curse…

So, it was a mishmash of rejected thinking, errors, and hoaxes but not everything had to do with science. Lots of these “myths” were popular in the public or the media but gained zero traction as legitimate science. I bought it to see how these popular myths (if not popular “science”) were treated. It was a mixed bag.

The issue, considered a Time Inc. Book, priced at $13.99 is a snazzy coffee table edition. Each “myth” takes up one page or less. It’s well illustrated and a casual read for those who are not specialists in science. I would recommend it to those who find science stuff interesting but don’t have a formal background in it. As with typical “popular science”, specialists will find plenty of nits to pick in the text. But overall, it’s not flawed except in the egregiously wrong title. There was no introduction or editor’s note, the content started immediately with Myth #1: Neutrinos Are Faster Than Light – a legitimate story that described how an experiment went awry.

Continuing on, the title nagged at me. Science gets plenty wrong because it’s done by people who make lots of mistakes and because it’s insanely difficult to tease out the actual answer from messy data.

See Science Isn’t Broken: It’s just a hell of a lot harder than we give it credit for

It’s not the most prudent thing to do for a pro-science publication to boldly suggest on the cover that science was wrong about crop circles (or time travel, the vaccine-autism link, or that humans and dinosaurs co-existed) because that’s deceptive and degrading to the scientific community who coalesced around a conservative consensus for those questions. There was NEVER solid support for such things. A few fringe scientists, but more often some pseudoscientific non-scientists, may have blown a lot of hot air about their pet ideas but that didn’t make them true and it didn’t make it “science”. I wished Popular Science would have picked up on that.

Science needs cheerleaders. Smart ones. We don’t need science porn like the “I Fucking Love Science” website or sciencey crap television like Ghost Hunters and Finding Bigfoot. We need to cultivate genuine science appreciation through showing why science is the best way of knowing nature that humans have devised. Nothing is totally reliable but science is self-correcting and continues to approximate what we might reasonably consider the “truth”. In a way, this issue gets there but the path has several pitfalls and cul de sacs.

Scientists did at one time give some credence to Piltdown Man, photographic memory, stress-causing ulcers, and spontaneous generation, then ditched them. There are many examples here of that sort of correction. Alchemy morphed into chemistry. Astrology begat astronomy. So perhaps the title could have been 100 Things Science Rejected. Or 100 Things Science Soundly Skewered. No, that probably wouldn’t have sold very well but it would have been more on point.

As with any list, we can quibble with what was included and not included. For example, War of the Worlds “mass panic” had nothing really to do with science but with the media so it shouldn’t have been in here. Neither should the bit on Dihydrogen Monoxide or Mrs. Toft repeatedly giving birth to various animal parts. They were interesting stories but not on theme.

I’m a bit annoyed that some non-scientific topics are in here at all because, just by being there, they get a small jolt of credibility – the moon landing hoax, pyramids on the moon, dowsing, chemtrails and the Atacama alien – even though they are discredited. This bullshit would be better off ignored here.

On the other hand, this is an opportunity to inject some skeptical thinking into the mainstream. I enjoyed looking for familiar names throughout. Some name-dropped skeptics included Dr. Darren Naish (Loch Ness Monster), Dr. Stuart Robbins and Dr. Phil Plait (Pyramids on the Moon), and yours truly (Bigfoot). (I did not know I was mentioned in it until I actually read that entry. SURPRISE!) The emphasis on uncovering hoaxes, calling out pseudoscience, and promoting sound evidence over bad shows me that the skeptical voice is greatly needed and appreciated in society even if it doesn’t always seem so. I’m encouraged by that. We are being heard, read, and referred to, not vilified!

In some entries, they highlighted fiction that enhanced the myth – Megalodon’s Discovery Channel fake documentary, the spaghetti tree April Fools Joke, the Jackalope creation, and the blunder of a fossil collector and National Geographic who didn’t listen to paleontologists who said archaeoraptor (“Piltdown chicken”) was a doctored fake. (D’OH!)

Indeed, many of the entries show how scientists doubted the initial claim and eventually ferreted out the truth – N-Rays, cold fusion, flying bumblebees and the planet Vulcan. Perhaps the title was a way of drawing in readers who are interested in this sort of thing who may actually learn something and consider science more valuable than before.

All in all, this publication is a fun, interesting read, flawed, but informative for the science-enthusiast average American. We need more good science stories for the public. And just like scientific endeavors, it won’t be perfect but it is worthwhile.

#1

https://sharonahill.com/?p=2578

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