DrizzleMan wrote:
Bland wrote:
(I am very curious about science, but a real "science dummy") Someone should write a book, "Science for Dummies"!
Steven Hawkin has written a few books which are supposed to introduce modern physics ideas without involving much math.
I read Steven Hawking's book, "A Brief History Of Time", when I was 22. I was just coming to terms with the idea that I'd never be a professional footballer (!). That book, along with "Unweaving The Rainbow" by Richard Dawkins, made me wish I'd been a scientist.
I looked at the Hawking book a few years later, and I really couldn't work out what had so inspired me originally.
I had studied maths at university, so I knew what an asymptote was, and what a singularity was. But I knew nothing about physics, and many of the facts in the Hawking book are presented without any background or explanation.
And that's what I find frustrating about a lot of popular science. It might make a person look good at dinner parties (not that I go to any), but often doesn't provide a very deep understanding.
One of the best books I've read recently was "The Big Bang" by Simon Singh. It starts off explaining how the ancient Greeks managed to measure the circumference of the earth, the size of the moon, the distance to the moon, the distance to the sun, and the size of the sun. How they did this was something I never learnt, and something I might never have figured out for myself (some scientist, huh?). Anyway, reading this I felt it was something I should probably know before I started reading about String Theory. The book then goes on to cover Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo, Newton, Michelson-Morley, Einstein, Hubble and much more.
I would recommend it if you can put up with all the biographical information (which I personally found very interesting).
There is a book on The Standard Model of particle physics that I've started (and intend to finish one day!) called Deep Down Things by Bruce A. Schumm. There's almost no biographical information, and it looks far more informative than the Hawking book.
Even this book only gets round to devoting one page to String Theory!