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The Great Unknown
Book

The Great Unknown

Seven Journeys to the Frontiers of Science

Viking, 2017 more...


Editorial Rating

9

Qualities

  • Analytical
  • Scientific
  • Overview

Recommendation

In less than a century, telescopes have detected remote galaxies, physicists have explored the most fundamental features of matter, biologists have mapped DNA and mathematicians have solved complex riddles. Even so, what people don’t know vastly exceeds what they do, and that gap fuels science. Professor of mathematics at Oxford University Marcus du Sautoy offers elegant and detailed accounts of great advances in human knowledge, and ponders whether some enigmas must remain forever mysterious.

Take-Aways

  • The invention of “chaos theory” circumscribed what humans are capable of knowing.
  • The discovery of particles smaller than atoms stunned scientists.
  • Uncertainty and indeterminacy are part of quantum physics.

About the Author

Marcus du Sautoy holds Oxford University’s Simonyi Professorship Chair for the Public Understanding of Science. He is a mathematician, author, and popularizer of science and mathematics, and received Title of Distinction of Professor of Mathematics at Oxford in 1996.


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