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E-raamat: Publishing And The Advancement Of Science: From Selfish Genes To Galileo's Finger

(Univ College London, Uk)
  • Formaat: 192 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Jan-2014
  • Kirjastus: Imperial College Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781783263738
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: 192 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Jan-2014
  • Kirjastus: Imperial College Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781783263738

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Popular science books, selling in their thousands — even millions — help us appreciate breakthroughs in understanding the natural world, while highlighting the cultural importance of scientific knowledge. Textbooks bring these same advances to students; the scientists of tomorrow. But how do these books come about? And why are some of them so spectacularly successful? This is the first ever insider's account of science publishing, written by an editor intimately involved in the publication of some of the most famous bestsellers in the field. Michael Rodgers reveals the stories behind these extraordinary books, providing a behind-the-scenes view of the world of books, authors and ideas. These vivid and engaging narratives illuminate not only the challenges of writing about science, but also how publishing itself works and the creative collaboration between authors and editors that lies at its heart.The book (like many of those it describes) is intended for a wide readership. It will interest people in publishing, past and present, and also academics and students on publishing courses. Scientists exploring territories outside their own speciality will enjoy it, while there is invaluable advice for those planning their first popular book or textbook. It will also appeal to readers with a humanities background who, finding the concepts of science intriguing, want to know more about how they are developed and communicated.
Foreword vii
Richard Dawkins
List of Illustrations
x
Acknowledgements xi
Prologue 1(2)
1 Hawking, Einstein, and popular science
3(12)
2 Discovering the world of science and scientists
15(18)
3 Falling under the spell of the selfish gene
33(22)
4 The origins and evolution of the college science textbook, and the birth of a superstar
55(20)
5 A companion to the mind, and science in the vegetable garden
75(14)
6 r- and IC-selection, and the extended phenotype
89(12)
7 The blind watchmaker, and the universe in twenty objects
101(16)
8 Bill Hamilton and John Maynard Smith: working with two giants of evolutionary biology
117(16)
9 `The best textbook of organic chemistry I ever hold in my hands'
133(14)
10 Scientific anecdotes, the ten great ideas of science, `science writing at its best'
147(18)
Epilogue 165(4)
Notes and references 169(4)
Index 173