
The Borderlands of Science
Where Sense Meets Nonsense
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Narrated by:
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Grover Gardner
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By:
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Michael Shermer
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Critic reviews
"His treatment of Carl Sagan, fearless navigator of scientific borderlands, is stellar, as is his chapter on racial differences....The book provides grist for the mill of thought and debate." (Publishers Weekly)
"Shermer writes accessibly about common scientific misperceptions." (Booklist)
A rambling man.
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Oh my...
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reasonable
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Like a mosaic
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This book is actually a collection of essays called chapters. The chapters/essays pretty much follow the same theme, but only loosely in some cases. The big surprise came when Grover made reference to a figure numbered in the thirties! There had been no figures 1-29, so I sussed that I was listening to a collection of smaller works. Grover didn't attempt to describe the figures, but I think I figured it out anyway.
By the way, before I started listening I wondered why Michael Shermer's name was so familiar to me. RAAM!
Who makes an audiobook of a book with figures?
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Unabridged Indeed
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A little disappointed. History of Darwin?
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Tedious
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Rather than an exploration of the actual borderlands of science, we get an attempt to describe an archetypal inhabitant of the borderlands. What sort of education, relationships, birth order etc create the "heretic personality" that will wind up in research projects that run contrary to mainstream thinking?
I don't think he is wrong in his conclusions, but I was very disappointed to find a dry psychology book disguised as a popular science text.
Misleading description
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