Mission to Abisko
Stories and Myths in the Creation of Scientific "Truth"
Perseus Books (Publisher)
Published on 7. October 1999
Book
Paperback/Softback
208 pages
978-0-7382-0167-2 (ISBN)
Description
We all know well that the science the general public learns is based upon what scientists and journalists tell us in newspapers, magazines, books, and television. But what is not so apparent is that the science that scientists themselves learn, even the paradigms they create, is also based on the stories they tell each other. Twelve top scientists who gathered in Abisko, north of the Arctic Circle, examine the phenomenon of science as storytelling in this fascinating and delightful book. }In May 1997, acclaimed science author John Casti led a dozen gifted writers to a remote Swedish village called Abisko, far above the Arctic Circle, to discuss the nature of scientific truth. Their discussions and debates focused on one major question: How do the stories that scientists tell each other, and the public, affect the way they do their science? This book is the outcome of that lively meeting of the minds. Each chapter is by a noted scientist who writes, or science fiction writer who practices science, and the cast includes John Barrow, Greg Bear, Ian Stewart, Gregory Benford, Larry Niven, and John Casti himself.
In this fascinating look behind the scenes of science, eleven of the worlds top scientist-authors examine the phenomenon of science as storytelling.As these authors demonstrate, the tales scientists tell each other are often even more mysterious or fanciful than those they tell the public. Many of these tales are called thought experiments, and their purpose is to focus and encapsulate large amounts of knowledge into short, pithy pictures, that capture the essenceand the shortcomingsof a scientific theory. Nevertheless, some of these talessuch as Schrdingers Cat and Hilberts Infinite Hotel have worked their way into the public consciousness, almost to the point of being household words. Mission to Abisko is a must-read for people curious about our perception of scientific truth. }
In this fascinating look behind the scenes of science, eleven of the worlds top scientist-authors examine the phenomenon of science as storytelling.As these authors demonstrate, the tales scientists tell each other are often even more mysterious or fanciful than those they tell the public. Many of these tales are called thought experiments, and their purpose is to focus and encapsulate large amounts of knowledge into short, pithy pictures, that capture the essenceand the shortcomingsof a scientific theory. Nevertheless, some of these talessuch as Schrdingers Cat and Hilberts Infinite Hotel have worked their way into the public consciousness, almost to the point of being household words. Mission to Abisko is a must-read for people curious about our perception of scientific truth. }
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Boulder
United States
Publishing group
INGRAM PUBLISHER SERVICES US
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 210 mm
Width: 137 mm
Weight
500 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7382-0167-2 (9780738201672)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Content
The Analogy of Nature (John D. Barrow); Proving the Dream (Greg Bear); Beyond this Horizon: Envisioning the Next Century, or Stories of Our (Preventable?) Future(s) (Gregory Benford); The Cambridge Quintet: The Chronicle of an Experiment in Science Fiction (John L. Casti); Becoming MaureenA Story of Development (Jack Cohen); Algorithmic and Ascetic Storytelling: Alternative Approaches to Imagination and Reality (Per-A. Johansson); Einstein at the Amusement Park: The Public Story of Relativity in Swedish Culture (Kjell Jonsson); Telling Science (Anders Karlqvist); Frankensteins Daughters (Paul J. McAuley); Mission to Abisko (Larry Niven); Secret Narratives of Mathematics (Ian Stewart).