We Are All Stardust
Scientists Who Shaped Our World Talk about Their Work, Their Lives, and What They Still Want to Know
by Stefan Klein
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Pub Date Nov 03 2015 | Archive Date Oct 20 2015
Experiment, The | The Experiment
Description
“What distinguishes scientists, in your eyes?”—Stefan Klein
“First and foremost, curiosity.”—Roald Hoffmann, Nobel Prize–winning chemist
When Stefan Klein, an acclaimed journalist, sits down to talk with 18 of the world’s leading scientists, he finds they’re driven by, above all, curiosity. When they talk about their work, they turn to what’s next, to what they still hope to discover. And they see inspiration everywhere: From the sports car that physicist Steven Weinberg says helped him on his quest for “the theory of everything” to the jazz musicians who gave psychologist Alison Gopnik new insight into raising children, they reveal how their paradigm-changing work entwines with their lives outside the lab. We hear from extraordinary natural and social scientists, including:
- Evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins on ego and selflessness
- Primatologist Jane Goodall on chimpanzee behavior
- Neuroscientist V. S. Ramachandran on consciousness
- Geographer Jared Diamond on chance in history
- Anthropologist Sarah Hrdy on motherhood
- And cosmologist Martin Rees on how “ultimately we ourselves are stardust.”
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781615190591 |
PRICE | $14.95 (USD) |
Average rating from 7 members
Featured Reviews
5 stars Fascinating series of interviews with scientists
I thoroughly enjoyed this book, made up of interviews with scientists conducted by author Stefan Klein over an extended period of time. The interviewees included a broad range of scientists in fields such as physics, chemistry, biology and medicine. It is questionable if all of the interviewees are actually scientists (for example, one is an economist and one a philosopher), but these interviews were still related to science. The questions asked are insightful and I felt that I got to know these scientist a little.
This book took a torturous route to get here. Originally published for a German magazine, these interviews were translated into German and then for the book re-translated back to English. This could have gotten messy but all re-translated interviews were checked by the original interviewees. So kudos to translator Ross Benjamin as the book reads seamlessly. I recommend this book for anyone interested in science.
Disclosure: I received this book for free via Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.
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