Showing posts with label science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science. Show all posts

Friday, August 31, 2012

BEFORE GALILEO: The Birth of Modern Science in Medieval Europe


From John Freely, physicist, historian, and author of Aladdin’s Lamp, The Grand Turk, and The Lost Messiah comes Before Galileo: The Birth of Modern Science in Medieval Europe, a new book illuminating the history of science during the Dark Ages on sale this week!

According to many popular narratives of scientific history, modern science began with the heroic efforts of Galileo to gain acceptance for his revolutionary sun-centered world view of Copernicus. But where do his predecessors fit into the story? In reality, before Galileo’s time, an impressive succession of medieval scholars paved the way for the Scientific Revolution, laying the foundations for generations of theories and discoveries yet to come.

In Before Galileo, John Freely seeks to right this historical injustice by bringing to life Europe and Asia’s earliest minds and marvels. Leading readers on a journey through centuries of groundbreaking discoveries, Freely examines the pioneering research of the first European scientists, many of them monks whose influence ranged far beyond the walls of the monasteries where they studied and wrote and into the outer world as their ideas interacted with Byzantine and Islamic cultures, going beyond the philosophic and mathematical science of the works in the great Library of Alexandria to explore and enliven new worlds and peoples.

Offering a bold new perspective on scientific history, John Freely fills a notable gap in the story of modern science and places the great discoveries of the age in their rightful historical context. Discover the untold stories of revolutionary scholars, such as Ibn Sina and Gerard of Cremona, who helped convey Arab science to the Western world or Albertus Magnus, among the first to implement the modern scientific method as we know it today. With authoritative research, enlightening profiles, and illuminating connections, Before Galileo charts the early stages of the Scientific Revolution, shedding light on the Dark Ages and highlighting the Renaissance, to showcase the transmission and continuity of scientific knowledge from one generation to the next beginning more than a thousand years before Galileo was born.

Praise for BEFORE GALILEO:

“Revealing … Freely traces the transmission of ancient Greek philosophical and scientific works to the Islamic world.” – Kirkus Reviews

“Surprising … A detailed look at the lineage and transmission of scientific thought from the Greeks through the medieval era.” – Publishers Weekly

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Giveaway: FREE RADICALS by Michael Brooks

Today brings the highly anticipated US release of Free Radicals: The Secret Anarchy of Science by bestselling author, physicist, and science journalist Michael Brooks.

For centuries, science has projected itself as responsible and safe: a carefully measured discipline involving sensible, level-headed people not given to dangerous passions. But what really goes on behind the scenes in the scientific community? In Free Radicals Michael Brooks traces the history behind one of the most successful cover-ups of modern times, delving into the darker side of scientific discovery to illuminate the fallibility, irrationality, craftiness, and egos behind some of science's greatest figures.

Revealing the extreme lengths some of our most celebrated scientists are willing to travel in order to bring groundbreaking discoveries to the world's attention, this exploration of history's greatest scientific achievements proves that in order to succeed, knowledge must be pursued by every means possible. To stay on top, scientists take drugs, follow crazy dreams, experiment on themselves, and occasionally die in the process. Newton fought ferociously with his colleagues to deny them credit for their work, Einstein relied on mystical insights when formulating his theories, and even Galileo covered up glaring errors while composing his most influential texts.

For a sneak peek at some of the subversive stories relayed from the wild frontiers of weird science detailed in Free Radicals, check out "Scientists Behaving Badly," a short history of scientific fraud published this week on the Huffington Post.

To celebrate the release of Free Radicals, we're giving away a single copy to one lucky reader. To enter, all you have to do is subscribe to The Winged Elephant. Subscribers will receive dispatches from Overlook announcing new books, special events, author interviews and book giveaways delivered directly to their inbox three or four times per week. Sign up before 1:00pm (EST) tomorrow and you'll be entered for your chance to win a copy!

Praise for FREE RADICALS

"Brooks raises intriguing questions about the value of peer review panels and ethics boards, while illuminating much of the gritty real work performed in ivory towers around the world."  

"A page-turning, unvarnished look at the all-too-human side of science."  Kirkus Reviews

"Brooks explores some of the important contributions science has granted to the human condition, and imaginatively examines some of its current and future potentialities."  Truthout

"Free Radicals illuminates the role of the irrational in science, the mistakes that make scientists human, and reveals that breakthroughs that change our lives in the most fundamental ways may have the most serendipitous origins." Brain Pickings  

"[Free Radicals] goes a long way toward making scientists - and science - a lot more real to the public. And to show how sometimes trusting a gut instinct is a good thing, even if the data is not there yet." Science 2.0

Visit Michael Brooks and Free Radicals online: http://www.freeradicalsbook.com/
Twitter: @DrMichaelBrooks