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Best American Science Writing of 2002
by Matt Ridley
Available at your local bookstore
Book Description
If, as Matt Ridley suggests, science is simply
the search for new forms of ignorance, then perhaps it follows
that with science's advances come new questions. Will human
genetic engineering become commonplace? Will human cloning
ever be safe? Are there many universes? How much will the
climate change during the coming century?
The Best American Science Writing 2002 gathers
top writers and scientists covering the latest developments
in the fastest-changing, farthest-reaching scientific fields,
such as medicine, genetics, computer technology, evolutionary
psychology, cutting-edge physics, and the environment.
Among this year's selections: In "The Made-to-Order
Savior," Lisa Belkin spotlights two desperate families
seeking an unprecedented cure by a medically and ethically
unprecedented means -- creating a genetically matched child.
Margaret Talbot's "A Desire to Duplicate" reveals
that the first human clone may very likely come from an entirely
unexpected source, and sooner than we think. Michael Specter
reports on the shock waves rippling through the field of neuroscience
following the revolutionary discovery that adult brain cells
might in fact regenerate ("Rethinking the Brain").
Christopher Dickey's "I Love My Glow Bunny" recounts
with sly humor a peculiar episode in which genetic engineering
and artistic culture collide. Natalie Angier draws an insightful
contrast between suicide terrorists and rescue workers who
risk their lives, and finds that sympathy and altruism have
a definite place in the evolution of human nature, David Berlinski's
"What Brings a World into Being?" ponders the idea
of biology and physics as essentially digital technologies,
exploring the mysteries encoded in the universe's smallest
units, be they cells or quanta. Nicholas Wade shows how one
of the most controversial books of the year, The Skeptical
Environmentalist, by former Greenpeace member and self-described
leftist Bjorn Lomborg, debunks some of the most cherished
tenets of the environmental movement, suggesting that things
are perhaps not as bad as we've been led to believe.
And as a counterpoint, Darcy Frey's profile
of George Divoky reveals a dedicated researcher whose love
of birds and mystery leads to some sobering discoveries about
global warming and forcefully reminds us of the unsung heroes
of science: those who put in long hours, fill in small details,
and take great trouble. In the end, the unanswered questions
are what sustain scientific inquiry, open new frontiers of
knowledge, and lead to new technologies and medical treatments.
The Best American Science Writing 2002 is a
series of exciting reports from science's front lines, where
what we don't know is every bit as important as what we know.
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