ABSTRACT

In the endless debate about the Two Cultures no book until this attempted to provide a selection of scientific writing on specific themes to stimulate students of arts subjects into discussion and writing about the nature of science and its relationship with the rest of life. This book is based on a selection of prose passages written by scientists about science, supplemented by notes and a brief linking commentary.

Originally published in 1965, the passages were chosen to illustrate or comment on different aspects of eleven main themes, ranging from surveys of changing ideas on the nature of the universe and the material of which it was made, to evolution past and future and the relation of science with religion and art. Most of the extracts were from contemporary authors, but there are passages by Aristotle, Bacon, Boyle, Hooke, Newton, Dalton, Faraday and Darwin.

At the end of the book there are suggestions for discussion to accompany each chapter, to encourage the study of the use of language in consideration of the nature, history and role of science.

chapter |1 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter One|15 pages

The Nature of the Universe

chapter Chapter Two|16 pages

The Nature of Matter

chapter Chapter Three|7 pages

The Nature of Life

chapter Chapter Four|21 pages

The Nature of Mind

chapter Chapter Five|19 pages

The Nature of Science

chapter Chapter Six|13 pages

Likenesses

chapter Chapter Seven|10 pages

Cause and Effect or Blind Chance?

chapter Chapter Eight|23 pages

Evolution and Man

chapter Chapter Nine|10 pages

Our Own Worst Enemies

chapter Chapter Ten|13 pages

Science and Art

chapter Chapter Eleven|14 pages

Science and Religion