ABSTRACT

This book completes a scientific life trilogy of books following on from the Hows (i.e. skills) and the Whys is now the Whats of a scientific life. Starting with just what is science, then on to what is physics, what is chemistry and what is biology the book discusses career situations in terms of types of obstacles faced. There follow examples of what science has achieved as well as plans and opportunities. The contexts for science are dependencies of science on mathematics, how science cuts across disciplines, and the importance of engineering and computer software. What science is as a process is that it is distinctly successful in avoiding or dealing with failures. Most recently a radical change in what is science is the merger of the International Council of Scientific Unions and the International Social Sciences Council.

Key Features:

  • Dissects what is science and its contexts
  • Provides wide ranging case studies of science and discovery based directly on the author’s many decades in science
  • The author has outstanding experience in mentoring and career development, and also in outreach activities for the public and students of all ages
  • The world of science today involves a merger of ‘the sciences’ and the ‘social sciences’

part I|1 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|6 pages

What Is the Scientific Life?

chapter 2|3 pages

What Is Physics?

chapter 3|2 pages

What Is Chemistry?

chapter 4|3 pages

What Is Biology?

part II|1 pages

Scientific Career Choices: What to Do When Faced With . . .

chapter 5|1 pages

Junctions

chapter 6|2 pages

Crossroads

chapter 7|3 pages

Roundabouts

chapter 8|3 pages

Traffic Lights

chapter 9|3 pages

Obstacles

chapter 10|2 pages

Mountains

part IV|1 pages

Science and Mathematics: Across the Disciplines and Side by Side with Engineering

part V|1 pages

Science Is a Process

part VI|1 pages

A Trend: The Coming Together of the Sciences and the Social Sciences