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Dawkins R. — Unweaving the Rainbow: Science, Delusion, and the Appetite for Wonder
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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Ðóáðèêà: Ôèçèêà/

Ñòàòóñ ïðåäìåòíîãî óêàçàòåëÿ: Ãîòîâ óêàçàòåëü ñ íîìåðàìè ñòðàíèö

ed2k: ed2k stats

Ãîä èçäàíèÿ: 1998

Êîëè÷åñòâî ñòðàíèö: 337

Äîáàâëåíà â êàòàëîã: 15.11.2009

Îïåðàöèè: Ïîëîæèòü íà ïîëêó | Ñêîïèðîâàòü ññûëêó äëÿ ôîðóìà | Ñêîïèðîâàòü ID
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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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