Revolutionary Science
By Steve Jones
4/5
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About this ebook
Steve Jones
Professor Steve Jones was born in Wales, educated in Scotland and lives in London. He is Professor of Genetics at the Galton Laboratory at University College London. His first book, ‘The Language of the Genes’ (1993), won the Rhône-Poulenc Prize for the Best Science Book of the Year. It was based on the Reith Lectures he gave in 1991. He is Co-Editor of the ‘Cambridge Encyclopaedia of Human Evolution’ and joint author of The Open University final year genetics textbook.
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Reviews for Revolutionary Science
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- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The concept is to profile science and scientists at the time of the French Revolution. It was the Enlightenment, and all over England and northern Frances “scientists” were inventing, discovering and collaborating as never before. In France, the government supported it. (In England, it was entirely private.) In France, revolutionary courts guillotined them. Those who survived went on to be governors and senators. Several became enormously wealthy for inventing things like tanning for leather and bleach.The book wanders all over scientific fields, expanding on what the scientists started, describing the state of the art today, pointing out where they were wrong, and the value of what they did. It also describes the context, the surrealist environment of an impoverished and filthy city in the midst of a violent upheaval. All very colorful and engaging. Jones is a scientist, and his enthusiasm and passion make the whole enterprise glide effortlessly.This is the American edition of the British original, but unfortunately the American publisher didn’t bother to edit it – except for the title, which they changed to Revolutionary Science –without explanation. It was No Need For Geniuses – which is what the judge said when sentencing one very prominent scientist to the guillotine. Jones refers to his original title four times in the course of the book, and it is confusing to say the least. So now you know what he’s talking about.One point worth remembering came from Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, who Jones calls France’s greatest optimist. He actually invented the word biology. He spent his life in biology and paleontology (beating Darwin to the evolutionary punch), and came to the conclusion that Man “is destined to exterminate himself after having rendered the globe uninhabitable.” That was at the turn of the century – the nineteenth century.David Wineberg