In this latest volume of erudition from Edge.com founder John Brockman (This Will Make You Smarter), the question "What is your favorite deep, elegant, or beautiful explanation?" serves as the prompt for over a hundred concise essays. The topics cover the gamut of the sciences while also including answers from other realms including economics and the arts. Darwin and Einstein, while not the precise subject of many answers, feature prominently as do ideas of human consciousness and cognition. As with other collections of this ilk, the essays widely vary in ease of comprehension and level of profundity. While there is no structure beyond the individual essays, occasionally a few essays in close proximity will touch on similar matters, as when Nicholas Christakis's essay on why the sky is blue is followed by Philip Campbell's on "The Beauty in a Sunrise", each referencing the work of Lord Rayleigh on the scattering of light. A few entries border on gimmicks, such as Ernst Pöppel's series of haiku on trust or Katinka Matson's single sentence on "Occam's Razor": "Keep it simple." Still, this collection will satisfy anyone who is looking to stretch his thinking. (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
A smorgasbord of ideas.” — Kirkus Reviews
“Offers a rare chance to discover big ideas before they hit the mainstream.” — New York Times Book Review
“Fun and inspirational. … This engaging collection can be read from cover to cover or browsed as interest dictates, but all inquisitive readers will enjoy it. Highly recommended…” — Library Journal
“Characteristically thought-provoking and reliably cross-disciplinary, This Explains Everything is a must-read in its entirety.” — Brain Pickings
“A collection of essays by big thinkers answering big questions [should be] deeply satisfying. And This Explains Everything delivers.” — New Scientist
“The most stimulating English-language reading to be had from anywhere in the world.” — The Canberra Times
“Delivers an intellectual mélange you can dip into and savor. ... The reader gets something new at each turn of the page.” — New York Journal of Books
“A collection that reads like the best TED talks ever. It’s an absolute pleasure to read.” — FAREED ZAKARIA
“Rich in mental fodder. ... An indispensable way to sample thinking from many corners of the intellectual spectrum.” — Pop Matters
Characteristically thought-provoking and reliably cross-disciplinary, This Explains Everything is a must-read in its entirety.
The most stimulating English-language reading to be had from anywhere in the world.
Offers a rare chance to discover big ideas before they hit the mainstream.
New York Times Book Review
Delivers an intellectual mélange you can dip into and savor. ... The reader gets something new at each turn of the page.
New York Journal of Books
A collection that reads like the best TED talks ever. It’s an absolute pleasure to read.
Rich in mental fodder. ... An indispensable way to sample thinking from many corners of the intellectual spectrum.
A collection of essays by big thinkers answering big questions [should be] deeply satisfying. And This Explains Everything delivers.
A collection of essays by big thinkers answering big questions [should be] deeply satisfying. And This Explains Everything delivers.
This fun and inspirational collection of brief essays started with a question posed to the readers of Edge.org, founded by Brockman (This Will Make You Smarter: New Scientific Concepts To Improve Your Thinking): What is your favorite deep, elegant, or beautiful explanation? The result is 150 brief essays that present wonderful explanations of the world around us. The authors include Richard Dawkins, Eric Kandel, Alan Alda, and Brian Eno; all have something worthwhile to contribute. VERDICT This engaging collection can be read from cover to cover or browsed as interest dictates, but all inquisitive readers will enjoy it. Highly recommended for its content, though buyers should be aware that the contents are available for free on Edge.org.—Eric D. Albright, Tufts Univ. Lib., Boston
From a broad array of thinkers come answers to the question: "What is your favorite deep, elegant, or beautiful explanation?" Every year, Brockman, a literary agent who presides over the online salon Edge , poses a challenging question to the diverse community of Edge contributors. The question posed in 2012, which asked responders to identify some simple, nonobvious idea that explains a complex set of phenomena, was suggested by Steven Pinker. The replies come from such familiar names as Jared Diamond, Richard Dawkins, Matt Ridley and Eric Kandel; a few surprising ones, such as Brian Eno and Alan Alda; and many who are lesser known or unknown to the public but are established and influential in their fields. What remains unclear is why these particular answers were selected for publication. All answers are brief, most just two or three pages. Some of the respondents' choices seem obvious--Darwin on the theory of evolution by natural selection and Freud on the unconscious--while others--the double-helix structure of DNA, the germ theory of disease, the Gaia hypothesis of planet Earth, the law of unintended consequences--will also already be familiar to many readers. Perhaps most surprising is neuroscientist Ernst Pöppel's contribution: 20 linked haikus ("What is my problem? / I don't need explanations! / I'm happy without!"). Not all are as entertaining, however, and general readers may struggle with the vocabulary of special fields--e.g., "Metarepresentations Explain Human Uniqueness" or "Hormesis Is Redundancy." The sheer number of contributors and the broad scope of the book ensure that most readers will find topics to pique their interest, but that same feature means that many will find themselves flipping pages quickly. Other notable contributors include Sean Carroll, George Dyson, Clay Shirky, Stewart Brand, A.C. Grayling and Katinka Matson. A smorgasbord of ideas, best when judiciously sampled.
This is an entertaining and extensive collection of short essays by various scientific and social luminaries on their favorite theories of how the world works. It’s a wonderful example of team narration, a real plus with this rapidly changing short essay format. There’s a risk of tedious topic repetition in that much of the material deals with the same major scientific players of all time: Einstein, Newton, Galileo, Feynman, et al. This shortcoming is considerably relieved by the balanced gender mix. However, sometimes the transitions could be a bit more pronounced. Listen in batches; much of the material is so similar and the concise format so high speed that the combination can make it difficult to digest all the beauty and elegance. M.C. © AudioFile 2014, Portland, Maine
FEBRUARY 2014 - AudioFile