Curiosity: How Science Became Interested in Everything

by Philip Ball

Book, 2012

Status

Available

Call number

509

Collection

Publication

Bodley Head (2012)

Description

Looking closely at the sixteenth through eighteenth centuries, Ball vividly brings to life the age when modern science began, a time that spans the lives of Galileo and Isaac Newton. In this entertaining and illuminating account of the rise of science as we know it, Ball tells of scientists both legendary and lesser known, from Copernicus and Kepler to Robert Boyle, as well as the inventions and technologies that were inspired by curiosity itself, such as the telescope and the microscope. The so-called Scientific Revolution is often told as a story of great geniuses illuminating the world with flashes of inspiration. But Curiosity reveals a more complex story, in which the liberation--and subsequent taming--of curiosity was linked to magic, religion, literature, travel, trade, and empire. Ball also asks what has become of curiosity today: how it functions in science, how it is spun and packaged for consumption, how well it is being sustained, and how the changing shape of science influences the kinds of questions it may continue to ask.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member fpagan
A story of ~200 or so Englishmen and other Europeans who lived mostly in and around the 1600s. That century's religion-impeded scientific revolution (Galileo-Kepler-Newton, at least) has been rehashed in innumerably many books, including perhaps a majority of physical-science popularizations, but
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this volume's treatment is much longer, broader, more detailed, and more scholarly. Not really my cup of tea, but it could appeal to likers of history -- those likers of history who also have respect for science, that is.
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LibraryThing member DLMorrese
It is difficult to imagine that at one time, not so long ago, curiosity was not seen as the virtue most people regard it as today, and that experimenting was often viewed as idle (and ultimately pointless)tinkering. In this book we see how the scientific revolution was really more of an evolution,
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and that many of the early practitioners of science in the 16th to 18th Centuries were not what we might consider today as scientifically minded, although they were quite innovative for their time.
Clarity is not this particular book's strong point. The prose is heavy and professorial, often feeling more like a listing of historical facts than a smooth presentation of a point. Still, it is an interesting subject, and I may have learned a few things from reading it.
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Original publication date

2012
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