Research Catalog
How to think about science.
- Title
- How to think about science. Episode 12.
- Publication
- [Toronto] : [CBC Radio One], [2008]
Items in the Library & Off-site
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1 Item
Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Audio | Request in advance | BD581 .A253 2008g | Off-site |
Holdings
Details
- Additional Authors
- Description
- 1 audio disc (54 min.) : digital; 4 3/4 in.
- Summary
- From time to time, researchers test the public's understanding of science. The public, predictably, turns out to be woefully ignorant: 20% think the moon is made of green cheese, 30% think an electron is bigger than a molecule and so forth. But, for David Abram, this demonstrably shaky grasp on the details misses the point. He thinks we are conditioned by scientific understandings at a much deeper level, and that the main effect of this conditioning is to make us distrust our senses. For citizens of the republic of techno-science, he says, the real world is not the one we can touch and taste - it is the one that is disclosed by particle physics or radio astronomy. David Abram is a teacher and a writer, whose book The Spell of the Sensuous has been widely read and much praised. He believes that we ought to snap out of our technological trance and, literally, come to our senses. He shares his thoughts with Ideas producer David Cayley.
- Uniform Title
- Ideas (Radio program)
- Subjects
- Note
- Originally broadcast on CBC Radio One's program, Ideas on February 27, 2008.
- Compact disc.
- OCLC
- ocn269782878
- 269782878
- SCSB-5403462
- Owning Institutions
- Columbia University Libraries