More Is Different
Anderson's argument that knowing the rules for the parts tells you almost nothing about the whole — that each scale of nature has its own laws. The four pages that gave emergence its backbone.
Read itPhilip W. Anderson
Anderson's argument that knowing the rules for the parts tells you almost nothing about the whole — that each scale of nature has its own laws. The four pages that gave emergence its backbone.
Read itemergencecomplexityphysics
Richard Feynman
Feynman's name for science that copies the rituals of rigor without the honesty underneath. The bit about bending over backwards to show how you might be wrong is the highest bar anyone has set for thinking straight.
view similar →Eugene P. Wigner
Wigner asks why mathematics invented for its own sake keeps turning out to describe the physical world, and refuses to pretend the coincidence is explained. The puzzlement is the gift.
view similar →James D. Watson
Watson's account of the race to DNA's structure — vain, competitive, gossipy in a way scientists almost never allow themselves. The formal papers erase precisely the human scramble this book keeps.
view similar →Erwin Schrödinger
A physicist wandering into biology to ask how life stores and copies its instructions, years before anyone had seen the double helix. The pleasure is watching a great mind reason across a border it doesn't fully command.
view similar →Richard P. Feynman
Feynman on why doubt and uncertainty are features of science, not things to apologize for. He treats not-knowing as something close to a moral stance.
view similar →Freeman Dyson
Dyson cheerfully picking at scientific consensus, climate included, with the optimism and stubbornness of someone who's earned the right to be interestingly wrong. Read it for the habit of mind, not the verdicts.
view similar →Albert Einstein
Einstein reflecting on how theories actually get made — the role of intuition, invention, and a feel for simplicity. Rare access to how one extraordinary mind understood its own process.
view similar →Jacob Bronowski
Bronowski writing about science as a human and even moral activity, in prose that stays reflective without going soft. He wants you to see it as a way of being honest, not a pile of results.
view similar →Richard P. Feynman
The quieter Feynman memoir — his first wife's illness, the Challenger investigation, the plain pleasure of figuring things out. The O-ring dropped into a glass of ice water is method and showmanship in one gesture.
view similar →Karl Popper
Popper's attempt to say what separates science from everything else: not proof, but the willingness to be refuted. Even where the argument strains, the discipline of it is the lesson.
view similar →Primo Levi
Levi tells his life through the elements, each chapter a metal or gas that maps onto a person or a year. A chemist and a survivor proving that technical and human understanding can share a single sentence.
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