Bedeviled, Jimena Canales
Bedeviled, Jimena Canales
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Bedeviled
A Shadow History of Demons in Science

Author: Jimena Canales

Narrator: Peter Berkrot

Unabridged: 15 hr 34 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 11/10/2020


Synopsis

How scientists through the ages have conducted thought experiments using imaginary entities―demons―to test the laws of nature and push the frontiers of what is possibleScience may be known for banishing the demons of superstition from the modern world. Yet just as the demon-haunted world was being exorcized by the enlightening power of reason, a new kind of demon mischievously materialized in the scientific imagination itself. Scientists began to employ hypothetical beings to perform certain roles in thought experiments―experiments that can only be done in the imagination―and these impish assistants helped scientists achieve major breakthroughs that pushed forward the frontiers of science and technology.Spanning four centuries of discovery―from René Descartes, whose demon could hijack sensorial reality, to James Clerk Maxwell, whose molecular-sized demon deftly broke the second law of thermodynamics, to Darwin, Einstein, Feynman, and beyond―Jimena Canales tells a shadow history of science and the demons that bedevil it. She reveals how the greatest scientific thinkers used demons to explore problems, test the limits of what is possible, and better understand nature. Their imaginary familiars helped unlock the secrets of entropy, heredity, relativity, quantum mechanics, and other scientific wonders―and continue to inspire breakthroughs in the realms of computer science, artificial intelligence, and economics today.The world may no longer be haunted as it once was, but the demons of the scientific imagination are alive and well, continuing to play a vital role in scientists' efforts to explore the unknown and make the impossible real.

About Jimena Canales

Jimena Canales is a writer and faculty member of the Graduate College at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. She was the Thomas M. Siebel Chair in the History of Science at the University of Illinois and associate professor at Harvard University. She is the author of The Physicist and the Philosopher: Einstein, Bergson, and the Debate That Changed Our Understanding of Time (Princeton) and A Tenth of a Second. She lives in Boston. Twitter @_Jimena_Canales


Reviews

Goodreads review by Eve on November 03, 2020

This modern demonology for the age of reason offers at least one mind-altering epiphany a chapter. I generally assume histories of science will be too dry for me. But Bedeviled is so felicitously written that my only struggle in getting through it was my need to savor so many sentences. It leaves me......more

Goodreads review by Entintadas on December 22, 2024

"Es importante distinguir entre lo que no existe ahora y lo que nunca existirá" En este libro la autora nos presenta la otra historia de la ciencia, centrada en lo que no se ha descubierto, en las incógnitas que quedan después de un gran éxito científico. La lectura es interesante gracias a ello, ya......more

Goodreads review by Ramin on December 10, 2020

[Here's an excerpt of the review I wrote for Nature magazine. Please check out the whole essay here: [URL not allowed] ] The workings of powerful computers, the processes of evolution, the market forces that drive the global economy. To conceptualize such unseen forces, researc......more

Goodreads review by kate on December 30, 2024

This book is a wonderful mixture of the history of science and philosophy......more


Quotes

"Jimena Canales comes at science from a strange and original angle—and it pays off brilliantly. Listen to the demons!" —James Gleick, author of Time Travel: A History"Jimena Canales is one of the finest contemporary writers on science, at once a dedicated scholar and a captivating entertainer. In Bedeviled, she has hit on a wonderfully curious subject, and has written a fascinating book. Who knew how many scientists had their own little devils whispering into their ears?" —John Banville, author of Mrs. Osmond"Hovering between the human and the divine, the thought experiment and whimsy, the demons of science do an impressive amount of conceptual work, as Jimena Canales shows in her wide-ranging, readable book. By hunting down the demons of physics, biology, economics, and other sciences, Canales writes a new history of modern science from a fresh and imaginative viewpoint." —Lorraine Daston, director emerita, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin