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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
Graphical user interface (GUI) 293—294 (112)
Gregory, Richard 23 276 (61 62)
Gross, Paul 20 191 (63)
Gulls, gliding 274
Haldane, J.B.S. 195
Hallucinations 282
handwriting 88
Handwriting, sex-related 166—170
Hardin, C.L. 58n (65)
Harding, Sandra 191 (63)
Harems, seal 258
Harmonics 71
Haydon, Benjamin 58—59 (116)
Hearing 66—72
Heaven's Gate cult 28
Herbivores 220
Higher Superstition, (Gross and Levitt) 191 (65)
History, and our existence 2—3
Hitler, Adolf 63 112
Hobbes, Thomas 186
Hobble's law 80
Hoist, Erich von 280—281 (146)
Hollow mask illusion 267—269
Homeopathic magic 181 (54)
Homo spp. see also “Humans”
Homo spp., increase in brain size 287—288 289
Homo spp., language and communication 296 297
Homunculus 283 (38)
horoscopes 120 123—124
How the Mind Works (S. Pinker) 179 184 191 278 (119)
Hubbard, L. Eon 27—28
Hubble, Edwin 59 60
Human genome project 90 94 (11)
Humans see also “Homo spp.”
Humans, evolution of the brain 286—313 (i55)
Humans, impressed by coincidences 177—178
Hume, David 133—135 (71 139)
Humphrey, Nicholas 152 (71 72)
Huxley, T.H. 179 (73)
Hybrids 214—226
Identity parades 86—87 94
Illusion 276 (61)
Imagination 512—523
Imitation, by individuals 305—306 308
Independent newspaper 107
India, nuclear tests by 30n
Information, tachnical meaning of 259
Infrared rays 52
Insects, and virtual reality 280—281
Insects, ears 68—69
Insects, social 252—253
Insurance companies 111
Intellectual Impostures (Sokal and Bricmont) 41 (137)
Intuition 176—177 178—179
Iris-scanning machines 88—89
James, William 175
Jeffreys, Alec 99
Jenkins, Simon 36—37
Jesuits 144
Jesus, face of, in dishcloth 267
Julesz Effect 278 (77 119)
Jung, C.G. 154—155 (78)
Jupiter 6a
Jurors, educated in science 83—85
Kammerer, Paul 157 (86)
Kauffman, Stuart 202—203 204 207 (79 80)
Keats, John x xiii 26 27 38—39 41 61 64 79 81 145 313 (22)
Keller, Helen 257 (81)
Kelvin, William Thomson, Lord 129—130 (20)
Kennewick Man 18—20
Keyhole, visual 258—259
Kimura, Motoo 95 (124)
Kingdon, Jonathan 306 (84)
Koertge, Noretta 189—190 (85)
Koestler, Arthur 154 157 (86)
Kropotkin, Peter 211
Kxebs cycle 9
Lamb, Charles 38—39 114 (116)
Language 294—296 309—310 (36 95 118 119)
Lanier, Jaron 272
Laserdiscs 79
Lateral inhibition 262 (8)
Launch windows 301 (16)
Law, and DNA evidence 83—113
Law, and eye-witness evidence 85—86
Lawrence, D.H. 125 51
Lawyers, woe unto 83
Leakey, Richard 205—207 242 (90 91—92
Leonardo da Vinci 47
Lettvin, J.Y. 258—259 263—264 (93)
Levin, Bernard 31—32
Levin, Margarita 191—192 (63)
Levitt, Norman 191 (63)
Lewin, Roger 205—207 (91 92)
Lewis, C.S. 186 310 (94)
Life, and geological time 9—14
Life, and personal identity 1—5
Life, extra-terrestrial 60—63 90 117—128 137—138
Life, science and the wonder of 5—9
Light, and the electromagnetic spectrum 52
Light, divisibility and the rainbow 39 40 42—49
Light, red/blue-shifted 59—60 62
Light, refractive index 44
Light, velocity 44
Light, wave theory of 43
Line detectors, and vision 263
Line-ups (identity parades) 86—87 94
Longitudinal transmission 226
Lorenz, Konrad 31
Lovelock, James 223 225 (97)
Lucky to be alive 1—5
Lucy 288 (90 91)
MacCready, Paul 275
Macromutations 195—196 197
Mad cow disease 54
Magic Eye illusions 278 (119)
Magical customs 180—182 (54)
Magnetic resonance imaging 59
Mammals, DNA reflecting ancestral environments 254—255
Mammals, water-dwelling 242—245
Maps, and evolution of the human brain 297—299
Margulis, Lynn 224 225 226 228 (98 99)
Marine chemistry, genes reflecting 255~6
Maynard Smith, John 207—208 222—223 275 (100 101 102)
Mcintosh, Janet 190 (45)
Mead, Margaret 211 21m (55)
Medawar, P.B. 30 32—33 184—185 312 (103 104 105)
Membranes, in cells 9
Meme Machine, The (S. Blackmore) 308 (10)
Memeplexes 306 (10)
Memes 302—309 (10 31 38 39)
Memory 257—258
Mengele, Josef 91—92 112
Metaphors, and evolution of the human brain 310—312
methane 223
Mice, genes 218 254
Microwaves 52
Minsky, M. 309 (107)
Miracles 133—134 (71 129)
Mites 241
Mitochondria 9 225—226 227 (98 134)
Mixotricha in termite gut 229—230 (98)
Model of world 277 (123)
Model of world, animal as 240
Molecular clock 208—209 (62 83)
Moles 241
Mollon, John 58 (108)
Monkeys, colour vision 58 (108)
Monod, Jacques 187 (109)
Montgomery, Field Marshal, agrees with God 217
Moon 51
Moon rhythmic influences of 75
Moore's law 288 292 294 (112)
Morning, why get up in the ix 6
Morris, Desmond 2 (110)
Moths, Lesser Yellow Underwing 215—226 (53)
Mouse 254
Mouse, computer 293
Moustaches 87
MUSIC 36 70—72
Mutations 195—196 197 235—236
Mutations and DNA fingerprinting 95—96 98
Myhrvold, Nathan 294 (112)
Mysticism 17 (71 129)
Native Americans, and Kennewick Man 18—20
Natural selection 245 (30 33 101 124)
Natural selection and genes 216—227 221 233
Necker cube 276 (61)
Nehru, Jawaharlal 30
Nemesis (hypothetical star) 77 (111)
Neptune, discovery 61 (122)
Nerve impulses, and colour vision 55—56 (89)
Neutral theory of evolution 95 195 (124)
New York Review of Books ( J. Maynard Smith) 207—208 (102)
Newcomb, Simon 130 (20)
Newton, his prism 39—40 42—43 (89)
Newton, Sir Isaac x 191 313
Nightingales 79—80
Norsemen, and Kennewick Man 19
O'Reilly, John Boyle 15
On Giants' Shoulders (M. Bragg) 32 (12)
Oort Cloud 77 (111)
Opportunities for coincidence 159 178
Optimal Foraging Theory 163
Optomotor apparatus 280
Origin of Species, On the (C. Darwin) 16 (26)
p-values 170—171 176
Pale Blue Dot (C. Sagan) 114 (128)
Paranormalism xi—xii 124—129 (37 71 121 129 139)
Paranormalism and credulity 138—144 (141 147)
Parasites 226 241 (29 113)
Parentage, and DNA fingerprinting 91 112—123
Parsonstown, Leviathan of (telescope) 26
Paternity see “Parentage”
Patterns, real and imaginary 160—162
PCR (Polymerase chain reaction) 92—93 (87)
Peake, Mervyn 1
Penny, diary of a 235
Perpetual motion 135
Personality, and astrology 118—129
PETWHAC, defined 151
photons 43
Physics and Psychics (V. Stenger) 188 (139)
Pickering, William Henry 130—131 (20)
Pies, Mrs 288
Pigeons, in a Skinner box 162—165 172 (28)
Pinker, Steven 179 184 191 278 (118 119)
Pitch 69
Planets, discovery 61
Planets, outside our solar system 61—62
Plumber, virtual 273
Pluto, discovery 61
Poetry, and emotion 79
Poetry, and science 15—18 124—127
Poetry, bad poetic science 180—209
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) 92—93 (83 87)
Polymorphism 253—254 (11 53)
Porphyria variegata 104 (11)
Post-modernism 41 (63 137)
Predator—prey population cycles 74
Preminger, Otto 118
Presley, Elvis 125
Pressure 66—67
Principal of Least Action 44 (5)
Prions 54—55
prisms 42—43
Prosopagnosia 269 (124)
Proteins (83)
Proteins, alternative forms 96
Proteins, prions 54—55
Psychic phenomena, explained away 145—147 149—152 (71 129 139)
Psychology, evolution of 177 179 (7 125)
Pterosaurs, flight 275 (100)
Pulsars 34 (122)
Python, Monty 119
Quantum theory 50 (15 40 117 120 131 149)
Quantum theory and light 43
Quantum theory, misuse of 188
Quarks, and Bernard Levin 31—32
Radio waves 52
Rainbows 45—49 (150)
Raine, Kathleen 6
Rainforests, and gene survival 221 222
Rainmaking 161 181—182 (54)
Randi, James 123 128 (121)
Recognition, sensory 258—265
Redundant sensory information 259—265 (6 8)
Refraction, refractive index 44 45
Reincarnation 125—126
Reliability test 122 (37)
Religious customs 180—183 (54)
Restriction enzyme 100 (83 87)
Retinal cells 55 56
Rettenmeyer, C.W. 241
Romanov family, identification 91
Rothschild, Miriam 241 (126)
Rowing analogy 216 (31)
Rowland, Ian 128
Royal Institution Christmas Lectures 123 145 292 (142)
Ruskin, John 49
Sagan, Carl x 18 30 63 114 138 (127 128 129 130)
Sagan, Dorion 224 (99)
Satellite pictures, 'false colour' 57
Scapegoats 182—183 (54)
Scepticism 129—138 142 143 (71 121 129 139 147)
science (40 41 51 60 88 103 129 149 154)
Science fiction 27—29 37
Science, 'dumbing down' of 21—24
Science, and culture 18—20 21 (136 154)
Science, and potential jurors 83—85
Science, bad poetic science 180—209 (58 59)
Science, poetic, and the sense of wonder 15—37 41—42 63 (128 129)
Science, society's perception of 29—37 (34 41 155)
Science, use of 5—6
Science, versus intuition 178—179 (155)
Scientology 27—28
Seals 238
Self-feeding processes 289—284
Self-feeding processes and evolution of the human brain 290—312
Selfish Gene, The (R. Dawkins) 212—223 216 (31)
Sex chromosomes 236 247 (11)
Sex, and genes 236 245—246
Sexual selection 292 309 (25)
Shakespeare, W. 180 251 252
Sheppard, P. M. 254 (53)
Shermer, Michael xi 188 (132)
Simonyi, Charles xii—xiii 51
Sine waves 69—70
Singer, Charles 89—90 (133)
Sitwell, Sacheverell 13
Sixth Extinction, The (Leakey and Lewin) 205 (92)
Skeletons, identification 91—92
Skinner boxes 162—165
slang 310—321
Smell, recognizing people by 88 89
Smith, Adam xii 210 212
Smith, D.C. 227 (134)
Snails, polymorphic 253—254 (53)
Snakes, learning dangers of 143
Snow, C.P. xiii 115 (136)
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