Chaos

Making a New Science

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Pub Date Mar 22 2011 | Archive Date Sep 01 2012

Description

The blockbuster modern science classic that introduced the butterfly effect to the world--even more relevant two decades after it became an international sensation.

For centuries, scientific thought was focused on bringing order to the natural world. But even as relativity and quantum mechanics undermined that rigid certainty in the first half of the twentieth century, the scientific community clung to the idea that any system, no matter how complex, could be reduced to a simple pattern. In the 1960s, a small group of radical thinkers began to take that notion apart, placing new importance on the tiny experimental irregularities that scientists had long learned to ignore. Miniscule differences in data, they said, would eventually produce massive ones--and complex systems like the weather, economics, and human behavior suddenly became clearer and more beautiful than they had ever been before.

In this seminal work of scientific writing, James Gleick lays out a cutting edge field of science with enough grace and precision that any reader will be able to grasp the science behind the beautiful complexity of the world around us.

Born in New York City in 1954, James Gleick is one of the nation's preeminent science writers. Upon graduating from Harvard in 1976, he founded Metropolis, a weekly Minneapolis newspaper, and spent the next decade working at the New York Times. Gleick's prominent works include Genius: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman, Isaac Newton, and Chaos: Making a New Science, all of which were shortlisted for the Pulitzer Prize. His latest book, The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood,was published in March 2011. He lives and works in New York.

The blockbuster modern science classic that introduced the butterfly effect to the world--even more relevant two decades after it became an international sensation.

For centuries...


Advance Praise

"Beautifully lucid . . . Gleick has a novelist's touch for describing his scientists and their settings, an eye for the apt analogy, and a sense of the dramatic and the poetic." --San Francisco Chronicle

"There is a teleological grandeur about this new math that gives the imagination wings." --Vogue

"Gleick's Chaos is not only enthralling and precise, but full of beautifully strange and strangely beautiful ideas." --Douglas Hofstadter, author of Godel, Escher, Bach

"Beautifully lucid . . . Gleick has a novelist's touch for describing his scientists and their settings, an eye for the apt analogy, and a sense of the dramatic and the poetic." --San Francisco...


Available Editions

ISBN 9781453210475
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