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And the Best Science Book Ever Written Is...

Category: Culture
Posted on: October 26, 2006 4:59 PM, by Jonah Lehrer

Primo Levi's The Periodic Table, at least according to the Royal Institution in London.

The shortlist

Primo Levi The Periodic Table
Konrad Lorenz King Solomon's Ring
Tom Stoppard Arcadia
Richard Dawkins The Selfish Gene

Other nominations

James Watson The Double Helix
Bertolt Brecht The Life of Galileo
Peter Medawar Pluto's Republic
Charles Darwin Voyage of the Beagle
Stephen Pinker The Blank Slate
Oliver Sacks A Leg to Stand On

All in all, not a bad list. I'd add some William James and Lewis Thomas, and replace A Leg to Stand On with An Anthropologist from Mars, and replace Brecht with Copenhagen, and substitute The Moral Animal for The Blank Slate. I'd also be tempted to add Damasio's Descartes' Error, if only because it's been so influential. Last but not least, I'd want to include some Jonathan Weiner, either Time, Love, Memory or The Beak of the Finch.

What do you think?

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Comments (13)

1

Sach's Uncle Tungsten

Posted by: John Wilkins | October 26, 2006 5:44 PM

2

One of my early favorites was Bernard Jaffe's "Crucibles: The Story of Chemistry"

Posted by: RWW | October 26, 2006 6:02 PM

3

"Microbe Hunters" by Paul De Kruif. See the Amazon page.

I read it decades ago (it was old then) and it provided context for everything I've since learned about disease.

An absolute classic, terribly relevant in the age of AIDS.

Posted by: Warren | October 26, 2006 6:29 PM

4

I second "Microbe Hunters". I was impressed that a book 80 years out of date could be so educational.

Posted by: Baratos | October 26, 2006 11:59 PM

5

I'll add a third for Microbe Hunters and add in another golden oldie -- Rats, Lice and History by Hans Zinsser, probably the most literate work on science for the educated layman ever written.

Posted by: chezjake | October 27, 2006 12:46 AM

6

I like "A Natural History of the Senses," by Diane Ackerman. I'm surprised Stoppard made the short list bu tnot Darwin.

Posted by: rich | October 27, 2006 6:42 AM

7

"Chaos", by James Gleick. And a fourth vote for "Microbe Hunters".

Posted by: Bill Planer | October 27, 2006 6:47 AM

8

Why are the only non-scientists playwrights?

Posted by: Shiller | October 27, 2006 9:46 AM

9

It seems there was a terrible oversight; the Book of Genesis didn't even make the short list. Yet more evidence of the war on Christians.

Posted by: Mustafa Mond, FCD | October 27, 2006 10:27 AM

10

Here's one vote for The Making of the Atomic Bomb by Richard Rhodes.

Posted by: The Cheerful Oncologist | October 27, 2006 10:39 AM

11

I'd go for the James Watson's Double Helix, then A River Out of Eden by Richard Dawkins, then The Lives of a Cell by Lewis Thomas, then The Immense Journey by Loren Eiseley,
then The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat by Oliver Sacks, then "The Naturalist" by E.O. Wilson, then "Natural Acts" by David Quammen and the rest of the list would be an uneasy tie among Brian Greene, Primo Levi, James Gleick and the cartoonist named Larson.

Posted by: Robert Krulwich | October 29, 2006 10:14 AM

12

Excellent topic. I have my own ideas, though, and Gleick is thankfully not among them. However, I'm grateful to you for those other names and titles which I'll may add to my list of 'to reads'.

Posted by: TheFallibleFiend | October 31, 2006 3:54 PM

13

Not thinking far as books most influential to others, since most in my list are far too recent and *very personal* choices, but if I 'was on a deserted island...' "Road To Reality" Roger Penrose, "God Created the Integers" Stephen Hawking, "The New Cosmic Onion" Frank Close, "Enchanted Looms" Rodney Cotterill, "The Rainbow and the Worm" Mae Won Ho, a good textbook on brain anatomy.. John Nolte's "The Human Brain" maybe, the "Brain Atlas" too, "Inward Bound" Abraham Pais.. btw, who the hell puts textbooks on their deserted island reading list?? can i get some highlighters, pens, and a few blank 5 subject notebooks?

Posted by: The Big Conductor | November 5, 2007 10:30 AM

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