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Dawkins R. — Unweaving the Rainbow: Science, Delusion, and the Appetite for Wonder
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Íàçâàíèå: Unweaving the Rainbow: Science, Delusion, and the Appetite for Wonder
Àâòîð: Dawkins R.
Àííîòàöèÿ: Did Newton "unweave the rainbow" by reducing it to its prismatic colors, as Keats contended? Did he, in other words, diminish beauty? Far from it, says Dawkins — Newton's unweaving is the key too much of modern astronomy and to the breathtaking poetry of modern cosmology. Mysteries don't lose their poetry because they are solved: the solution often is more beautiful than the puzzle, uncovering deeper mystery. (The Keats who spoke of "unweaving the rainbow" was a very young man, Dawkins reminds us.)
With the wit, insight, and spellbinding prose that have made his books worldwide bestsellers, Dawkins addresses the most important and compelling topics in modern science, from astronomy and genetics to language and virtual reality, and combines them in a landmark statement of the human appetite for wonder.
This is the book that Richard Dawkins was meant to write: a brilliant assessment of what science is (and what it isn't), a tribute to science "not because it is useful (though it is), but because it is uplifting, in the same way as the best poetry is uplifting."
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Ãîä èçäàíèÿ: 1998
Êîëè÷åñòâî ñòðàíèö: 337
Äîáàâëåíà â êàòàëîã: 15.11.2009
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Ñêîïèðîâàòü ññûëêó äëÿ ôîðóìà | Ñêîïèðîâàòü ID
Ïðåäìåòíûé óêàçàòåëü
'copy me' 305 (33)
'dumbing down' 21—24
'experience' of genes 236—238
'experimentum cruris' (Newton) 43
'false colour1 images 57
'zoologist of the future' 240
Abraham 217
Adams, Douglas 29
Aeroplanes, scepticism about lack of scepticism about 138—139
Afrikaners, genetic disease 104 (11)
Akenside, Mark 38
Aliens see “Life extra-terrestrial”
Altruism, individual and gene selfishness 212 (31 125)
Angler fish 174—176 245—246
Animal as model of world 240
Anteaters 242
Ants 252—253 (68)
Appleyard, Bryan 37 (2)
Aquatic mammals 242—245
Arms race 232—233 (30 145)
Arts, spending on 5—6
Asatru Folk Assembly 19
Asimov, Isaac 27 118 142 (3)
Asteroids, and mass extinctions 76 (1+)
Astrology 115—124 185—186 (37)
Astronomy 115—128 (122 127 128)
At Home in the Universe (S. Kauffman) 202—203 207 (80)
Atkins, Peter ix 18 30 (4)
Atkins, swimming analogy for refraction 44—45 (5)
Attneave, Fred 259 (6 8)
Auden, W.H. 15 199
Aunt, Apthorpe's or levitating 131
Aunt, Maud 33
Australopithecus 288 289 (90)
Aztecs 181 (54)
bacteria 9 (99)
Bacteria, and Gaia hypothesis 223—224 (97)
Bacteria, luminous 228
Bacteria, organelles 226—228
Bacteria, spirochaete 228 230
Bad poetry in science 180 187 (58 59)
Barcodes x—xi 49 71 81—82 102
Barlow, Horace 257—258 (8)
Bats, and model of world 283 (31)
Bats, and sound 70 72
Beauty 63—64
Bede, the Venerable 3
Bellamy, David 24
Bestseller lists 291 (30)
Beyond Belief (television series) 126—127
Big bang theory 60 (122 135)
Birds, flight control 274 (100)
Birds, keeping visual world constant 280
Birds, opening milk bottles 305 (53)
Birds, pigeons in Skinner box 162—165
Birds, sex chromosomes 236
Birds, song 79—81
Birthdays, coincidence 152—154
Blackmore, Susan 302 308 (10)
Blake, William 16—17
Blind Watchmaker, The (R. Dawkins) 292 293 (30)
Blood, resembling seawater? 255
Bombs, atomic 290—291
Bonobos 211—222
Book of Rainbows (R. Whelan) 47 (150)
Bormann, Martin 92
Bragg, Melvyn 32 (12)
Brain, as on-board computer 286—287
Brain, evolution 286—313 (74 153)
Brain, protected from redundant information 259—265 (6 8)
Branch point explosion hypothesis 201—202 208 209
Bricmont, Jean 41 (137)
Brockman, John xiii 189 (13 14)
Brooke, M. 246 249 250—251 252
Browne, Sir Thomas, Ume Buriall 14
Bug detectors 263—264 (93)
Burnell, Jocelyn Bell 34
Butterflies 245
Cain, A.J. 254 (53)
Calvin, William 8 299—300 301 (16 17)
Cambrian, evolution in the 200—206 208 209 (21 59)
Cambrian, explosion 201 204
camouflage 240
Carey, John 35—36 (18)
Cartmill, Matt 20 (19)
Cat, Cheshire 227 307 (134)
Caterpillars 140 172—174 245
CDs (laser discs) 79
Cell, complicated structure 9
Chain reactions 290—291
Chance, exploited by psychics 145—147
Chandrasekhar, Subrahmanyan 63 (122)
Change, sensory signalling of 260 264 (8 93)
Chaos theory, and popular culture 188
Chardin, Teilhard de 184—185 186 (103)
Chaucer, Geoffrey 251
Children, credulity in 138—144 (147)
Chimpanzees 297 305 (35)
Chimpanzees, pygmy (bonobos) 211—222
Chloroplasts 227—228 (98)
Chromosomes (11)
Chromosomes, sex 236
Chromosomes, tandem repeat regions 98—100 (87)
Cilia 228 230 (98)
Clarke, Arthur C. 27 129 130
Clarke, his Third Law 129 132 (20)
Climbing Mount Improbable (R. Dawkins) 305 (33)
Co-evolution 231—233 (42)
Co-evolution, co-adaptation 231 232 233 289—290 291—292
Co-evolution, self-feeding co-evolution of the human brain 289 292 294—312 (153)
codebooks 265
Coin theft 105—106
Coin tossing trick 145—146
Coincidences 145—160 176—178
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor 40—41 47—48 (56)
Color for Philosophers: Unweaving the Rainbow (C.L. Hardin) 58n
Colour 44 (89)
Colour vision 53—58
Combination lock 148
Comets, hitting Earth 76—77 (1 111)
Communication, by early humans 296 297—299
Computers, advances in 292—294 (48 112)
Computers, compared to the brain 286—287 288 289
Comte, Auguste 51
conception 1—2
Conjurors 127 128—129
Consciousness Explained (D.C. Dennett) 307 (38)
Consonants 78
Conspiracy theory meme 304 (39)
constellations 116
Conway Morris, Simon 208 (21)
Cooperation, genetic 213—233 238
Cosmic rays 52
Cottrell, Sir Alan 32
Crabs, hermit 241
Creation Revisited (P. Atkins) 44 (5)
Creationists, 'secular' 21 (19 45)
Creatures, fabulous 136—137 210 212
Crick, Francis 89—90 191 269 (24 148)
Cricket song 69
Critical mass 290 291
Cromwell, his warts 268—269
Cromwell, Oliver, his bladder 179
Crucible of Creation, The (S. Conway Morris) 208 (21)
Crucifixion 182—183 (54)
Cuckoos 246—252 (27)
Culture (42)
Culture, relativism in science 18—20 21 (63)
Culture, stereotypes 119—120
Cycles, long-wavelength 74—77
da Vinci, Leonardo 47
Daily Mail newspaper, panders to astrology 115
Dalrymple, Theodore 108—109
Darwin's Dangerous Idea (D.C. Dennett) 208 303 (39)
Darwin, Charles, On the Origin of Species 16 (26)
Darwin, Erasmus 18
Davies, N. 246 249 250—251 252 (27)
Davy, Sir Humphry 40 (142)
de Waal, Frans 211 212 (35)
Deacon, Terrence 309—310 (36)
Dean, G. 122 (37)
Dendrochronology 82
Dennett, D.C. 207 208 283 302 303 506—507 (38 39)
Deutsch, David 50 (40)
Diamond, Marian C 286
Diana, Princess of Wales 115 125
Dickinson, Emily 86
Dictators, moustaches 87
Diversity, evolution of 200—201 (101 124)
DNA see also “Genes”
DNA fingerprintittg 83—92 112—123 (87)
DNA fingerprintittg, a national DNA database 109—112
DNA fingerprintittg, and statistics 90—91 94—95 103—109
DNA fingerprintittg, background to the technique 95—100
DNA fingerprintittg, objections to evidence using 92—109
DNA fingerprintittg, single-locus 102—103
DNA fingerprintittg, technique 100—103
DNA, 'you believe in ...?' 190 (45)
DNA, a reflection of ancestral world 239 254—255
DNA, amounts in different species 97
DNA, and Rosalind Franklin 191 (148)
DNA, helical structure 187
DNA, junk 97—98 (87)
DNA, of parasites 226—227 (29)
DNA, probe 100 (83 87)
DNA, selfish/ultraselfish 98 (31)
DNA, symbolic meaning 183
DNA, tandem repeats 98—100 (83 87)
Doctor Dohttle 53 (96)
Dominance hierarchies 237 238
Doppler shift 59—60 62
Doppler, Christian 59
Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan 136 (121)
Dreams 158 282
Drugs, birdsong acting as 79—81
Druyan, Ann 114 (150)
Dunnock Behaviour and Social Ekolution ( N.B. Davies) 246 (27)
Dunnocks 246 248—249 251—252
Ears 66 68—69 see also “Hearing”
Earth, and the Gaia hypothesis 222—224
Earth, lucky to be alive on 4—5
Eddington, Sir Arthur 42 111 135 (44)
Edges, sensory signalling of 262
Edinburgh, Prince Philip Duke of 91
Ehrenreieh, Barbara 190 (45)
Einstein, Albert 42 (46 138)
Eldredge, Niles 195 196
Electromagnetic spectrum 52—53 58—59 see also “Light”
Electrophoresis, gel 101—102
Elements, and Praunhofer lines 50
Elephant, swinging penis 73—74
Ellsworth, Phoebe 190 (45)
Elton, Charles 74
Emotion, and poetry 79
Endoscopy 272—274
Enzymes 54 55
Enzymes, restriction enzymes 100—101 (87)
Errors, false negative and false positive (type i and type 2) 94 171—177
Eternal metaphors of paleontology 193—199 (58)
Evans, Christopher 288 (48)
Evolution (101 124) see
Evolution, 'top down' theory 203—206
Evolution, and bad poetic science 192—209
Evolution, and eatastrophism 198
Evolution, general evolutionism 192—193
Evolution, gradual versus episodic 195—200
Evolution, of the human brain 286—313 (i53)
Evolution, opposition to 20—21
Exorcist, enterprising but fraudulent 121
Experimental design 167—168
Extended Phenotype, The (R. Dawkins) 308 (29)
Extinctions, mass 75—77 195 199 222—223
Eye and Brain (R. Gregory) 276 (61)
Eye muscle paralysis experiment (Kornmuller) 281 (146)
Eye-witnesses, evidence from 85—86
Eyes, and colour vision 54 55—56 (89)
Faber Book of Science, The 35 (18)
Fabric of ReaUty, The (D. Deutsch) 50 (40)
Faces, eagerness of the brain to construct 266—269
Faces, recognition 87—88 258—259 266
Fairies 13ft (121)
Familiarity, anaesthetic of 6
Fan 22—24
Faraday, Michael g 23 186—187 (142)
Father Christmas 141
Fatima, Our Lady of 134—135
Feet, webbed 242 244—245
Feminism, and bad poetic science 189—192 (63 85)
Feynman, Richard 41—42 50 150—151 (50 51)
Fire, discovered by humans 11
Fish, and luminous bacteria 228
Fish, angler 174—175 245—246
Flagella, bacteria 228
Flies, creating a visual illusion on 281
Flies, mimicking jumping spiders 290 291—292
Flight 274 275 (100)
Flying saucers 137—138
Footprints, reading 297—299
Ford, E.B. 214—225 (53)
Foresight 302 327—333
Formants 78
Fossils, age of 9—14
Fourier analysis 72—73 76
Franklin, Rosalind 191 (148)
Fraunhofer lines 49—51 59
Frazer, Sir James 180—181 182 183 (54)
Freeman, Derek 21m (55)
Frequency dependent selection 96
Frogs, bug detectors 265—264 (95)
Frost, Sir David 126 127
Furs, and predator—prey cycles 74
Gaia hypothesis 222^-4 (29 97)
Galaxies, Hght from 59—60
Gamblers, irrational 165—166 (141)
Gel electrophoresis 101—102 (87)
Gender or sex 246 (118)
Gene pools 221 254 256
Gene pools, learning from 'experience' 258—259
Genes see also “DNA”
Genes, 'switch' 215—226
Genes, climate 214 219
Genes, cooperative 215
Genes, describing ancient worlds 255—256
Genes, isolated 90
Genes, segregation distorter genes 218
Genes, selfish genes are also cooperative 210—235 238 (51)
Genes, surviving in virtual worlds 284—285
Genes, variation 95—96
Gentes 247 (27)
Geological time, magnitude of 9—14
Gill, A.A. 34
God, good Darwinian 217
Golden Bough, The (J. Frazer) 180—181 (54)
Goldsehmidt, Richard 196
Goldsmith, Edward 222—225
Good, I.J. 108 (57)
Gould, Stephen lay 195—205 207 (5^9)
Gradualism 198—199 (30 32 33)
Grand Canyon 13—14
Grandmother, Lettvin's 258
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