Nature's Imagination: Frontiers of Scientific Vision

Nature's Imagination: Frontiers of Scientific Vision

by JohnCornwell (Editor)

Synopsis

Scientific reductionism, often defined as a method of understanding the whole by examining the parts, has had some spectacular success since the early 19th century, and is deemed to impose a deterministic non-anthropocentric immutable nature on the Universe. In the later 20th century, many discoveries and hypotheses in both biological and cosmological systems have forced a re-evaluation of the scientist's traditional mind set. Eminent scientists come together in this volume to examine and discuss these issues, and to give illuminating examples.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 224
Edition: 1st Edition
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 23 Mar 1995

ISBN 10: 0198517750
ISBN 13: 9780198517757

Media Reviews
All the components of a long-running blockbuster are here in abundance....A collection of intellectual vignettes welded together into a drama that anyone interested in complex systems and the philosophy will want to read and savor....As the wise old sage Freeman Dyson states in the introductory
chapter, 'Science is an art form and not a philosophical method.' This book is one of the strongest testaments to that belief. Read and enjoy. --Nature

All the components of a long-running blockbuster are here in abundance....A collection of intellectual vignettes welded together into a drama that anyone interested in complex systems and the philosophy will want to read and savor....As the wise old sage Freeman Dyson states in the introductory chapter, 'Science is an art form and not a philosophical method.' This book is one of the strongest testaments to that belief. Read and enjoy. --Nature


All the components of a long-running blockbuster are here in abundance....A collection of intellectual vignettes welded together into a drama that anyone interested in complex systems and the philosophy will want to read and savor....As the wise old sage Freeman Dyson states in the introductory chapter, 'Science is an art form and not a philosophical method.' This book is one of the strongest testaments to that belief. Read and enjoy. --Nature


Author Bio

About the Editor:
John Cornwell is Director of the Science and Human Dimension Project, Jesus College, Cambridge University.