Category: (Book)
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The twentieth-anniversary edition of the million-copy-plus
Bestseller
THIS EDITION of James Gleick’s groundbreaking bestseller
introduces to a whole new readership the story of one of the most
significant waves of scientific knowledge in our time. By focusing
on the key figures whose genius converged to chart an innovative
direction for science, Gleick makes the story of chaos theory not
only fascinating but also accessible, and opens our eyes to a
surprising new view of the universe.
Good book overall, too detailed sometimesReviewed by H. Wong, 2009-12-28
A summary of the field and some contributors. Some figures are not labeled properly and some descriptions are too detailed.
Insightful but tediousReviewed by Mark K McKinney, 2009-03-16
Chaos: Making a New Science is intrinsically a bunch of short essays based on the author's research into a number of Chaos experiments and the scientists performing them. One after another with nothing tying them into some sort of progression or main point. Still, many of the stories were very interesting and thought provoking. Some even included insightful tidbits about the inspirations or influences that guided the scientists. But overall it was a tedious read with no real conclusion other than this theory can mathematically describe many seemingly random events.
Another excellent book for non-expertsReviewed by Paul Stevenson, 2008-12-08
I am not a hard scientist, but I like to have some idea of what is
going on in those fields. Books like this one are ideal for people
such as me. This book tackles the fascinating field of Chaos
Theory. It turns out that certain patterns recur over and over in
many diverse areas of the universe, whether it is the patterning of
galaxies in clusters or the price of cotton.
Specialists working in many fields independently discovered curious
patterns, and eventually, starting mainly in the 1970's, they
became aware of each others' work. This book takes physics as the
field on which it focuses, but it mentions many others. Since some
of these fields involve conscious human decision making (especially
economics), I have begun to wonder whether I can find comparable
patterns in languages, my own specialty.
There are many reviews of a previous printing of this book: Chaos:
Making a New Science, so you can go there to check them out. Other
books useful to non-specialists interested in the history of and
current research in the hard sciences are The Fabric of the Cosmos:
Space, Time, and the Texture of Reality, A Briefer History of Time
and Electric Universe: How Electricity Switched on the Modern
World.