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Bryan Appleyard

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United Kingdom
12 books
4.5 (10)
47 readers

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Books

Newest First

Understanding the present

0.0 (0)
1

The book explores the history of science, from the dawn of the Enlightenment up to the present day, arguing that its triumph in almost every sphere of human activity, spectacular though it is, has come at a high price. In spite of its effectiveness — or, indeed, because of it — science has cut the individual adrift from his moorings, depriving him not only of a sense of ultimate meaning and purpose but also from the possibility of ever finding them. For science denies the conviction that value and meaning can be found in the facts of the world and, worse still, defines all truths as provisional, as hypotheses yet to be verified or refuted. [...] If science were merely a methodology, this would not be a serious problem. But today science has become the dominant way of understanding the world and our place in it. It shapes our political lives, our economics, our health, and [...] even our understanding of ourselves. [...] Appleyard devotes a chapter each to the emergence of environmentalism as a new kind of religion and to the metaphysical speculations accompanying advances in relativity, quantum mechanics, and chaos theory — the three major scientific achievements of the twentieth century. In both cases, he is sympathetic but ultimately skeptical that these developments can relieve the existential crisis brought on by the rise of the scientific worldview. He is especially wary of scientists like Stephen Hawking and Carl Sagan who believe in the possibility of a grand, unifying "Theory of Everything," or those champions of artificial intelligence who are working on the construction of "conscious" machines. As Appleyard sees it, [...] science must be recognized for what it is: "a form of mysticism that proves peculiarly fertile in setting itself problems which only it can solve." [...][excerpted from a review by Scott London [], 1997]

The pleasures of peace

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1

Impressionistic and colloquial poetry.

Richard Rodgers

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The life of an American musical genius.

How to Live Forever or Die Trying

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What has happened to get people so excited about the prospect of eternal life? And if they are right, what would it mean for us as human beings? If death became negotiable, would we still fall in love or have children? This work tackles these and other myriad questions, and sheds light on why we are the way we are. It offers a look at immortality.

Brave new worlds

4.2 (6)
18

Collects short stories on civilization invading and dictating citizens lives, from authors including Shirley Jackson, Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., and Geoff Rymann.