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Hardcover The Borderlands of Science: Where Sense Meets Nonsense Book

ISBN: 0195143264

ISBN13: 9780195143263

The Borderlands of Science: Where Sense Meets Nonsense

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Book Overview

As author of the bestselling Why People Believe Weird Things and How We Believe, and Editor-in-Chief of Skeptic magazine, Michael Shermer has emerged as the nation's number one scourge of superstition and bad science. Now, in The Borderlands of Science, he takes us to the place where real science (such as the big bang theory), borderland science (superstring theory), and just plain nonsense (Big Foot) collide with one another.
Shermer argues that...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

An excellent treaty on critical thinking

This is the second book on critical thinking I read by this author. The other was "Why People Believe Weird Things." They are both excellent. Michael Shermer is quite a polymath and original thinker. Armed with a Ph.D. in History of Science and an M.S. in Experimental Psychology, Shermer has acquired an outstanding understanding of the scientific method. He is an excellent writer who has developed a lively style. He turns dry material (the integrity of science) into very entertaining books. You will note that my review jumps around quite a bit. That's because the book does too. It does not always follow a sequential pattern. However, it makes the book more fun to read. At the beginning of the book, the author provides you with very good critical thinking tools, including 10 different steps to test a claim, and how to spot a crank. He also provides his assessment of the scientific credibility of various theories by assigning "fuzzy fractions." A 0.9 denotes a theory that is totally credible and well supported by science. A 0.1 denotes just the opposite. On such grounds, I like his distinction between SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) where he assigns it a respectable 0.5 and UFO where he assigns it a disrespectable 0.1. Thus, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence may have scientific merit. Meanwhile, testimonials of alien abductions have none. Near the end of the book, Shermer comes back to providing more thinking tools as he shares six key steps on how to develop one's creative genius in the chapter: The Amadeus Myth. This is a fascinating chapter where he uncovers that what we interpret as gifted genius is incredibly hard work. We just observe the end product: virtuosity. But, this masks the incredibly hard life long work these individuals had undertaken whether they were Mozart or Einstein. Over several chapters he covers the interesting research from Sulloway who conducted psychological analysis of what makes a likely scientific innovator. Through his work, the author studies in detail the profile of Carl Sagan, Stephen Jay Gould, and other scientists. Such luminaries typically have a very high openness to new ideas combined with an equally high level of skepticism. And, it is this combination that makes them unique. How many people do you know are open to new radical concepts, yet have the critical thinking quotient of testing such wild claims. That's the type of mind that can differentiate between SETI and UFOs without being either embarrassed or gullible. The author also provides an excellent synthesis on the subject of ecocide. In just a few pages, he summarizes very efficiently what Jared Diamond took over 500 pages to investigate in his most recent book "Collapse." Shermer describes how several regional primitive civilizations exploited their natural resources to the detriment of their own survival. These included the Incas of Machu Picchu and the Polynesians of Easter Island

Great Musings on Science & Pseudo-science

It's a alittle hard to describe this book, since it includes a wonderful variety of different essays on science, pseudo-science, scientists and the enterprise of science itself. The book is not a typical "debunker" treatise, it's more philosophy of science.I wasn't always sure where Shermer was headed next, but whether he is wading into the life of Alfred Lord Wallace or considering the effect of birth order in adoption of novel scientific theory, his discussion is absolutely compelling. I would start into a chapter absolutely sure I wasn't interested, only to find myself unable to stop reading until the chapter was over.In fairness, the book is disjointed in that it turns to a variety of loosely related topics with little or no transistion. Still, Shermer makes each topic interesting and, taken as a whole, the book makes a compelling case for the power of science as a tool for interpreting our world. The discussion of Alfred Lord Wallace is marvellous, and includes insights I have read nowhere else.

Natural Progression

In Why People Believe Weird Things, Shermer touched upon belief systems and just as the title says. He then wrote How We Believe (one of my favorite books of all time), which went deeper into belief systems and how they work. Where the first book focused on the paranormal and pseudoscience end of the pendulum's arc, Borderlands... focuses on the other end: science. Shermer puts his money where his mouth is and applies what he's learned from How We Believe to scientific thinking. While it is easy and fun to debunk all the whackos and kooks who believe in UFO's and the like, it takes greater courage to turn that same skeptical lens against the base you stand upon. Science's critique of itself is what makes it closest to the truth. Shermer shows that belief systems often encroach upon the scientific method and mess up the results. Shermer is today's scientific nietzschian.

Valuable Perspectives on How and Why Theories Are Proven

Human beings have unlimited imaginations. Connect two things in time, and some people are likely to assume a cause-and-effect relationship. As a result, many beliefs are based on nothing more than coincidence. Since science is a fairly new human activity, many beliefs that are now established in science started as beliefs built on associations or thought experiments. Michael Shermer, publisher and editor-in-chief of Skeptic magazine shows us the importance of that transition and how it is made. The book lacks the examples to completely establish its thesis, but will definitely give you new things to think about in the examples it does consider. The book is divided into three parts: Borderlands Theories; Borderlands People; and Borderlands History. A borderland of science is the mental space where there is some factual evidence that is evolving to pin down how or why the phenomena occur. But the pinning down isn't very far along. The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) is a good example. It is based on nothing more than a belief that there is intelligent life in the universe which wants to communicate with us. The approach to listening has been evolving with scientific discipline that will improve. Until we "hear" something though, it is hard for this activity to become mainstream science. Hypnosis is another good example of where science can explain some of the behavior (the "hidden observer" phenomenon in the mind), but not all. This places hypnosis in the borderlands area. I thought that the borderlands concept was a valuable one, and was glad that I learned it.The book goes on to give you ten tests you can use to help establish whether a theory has anything to it. This list will probably save you from rushing off to follow some ideas that you happen to watch on a television show. In fact, the book is very good at explaining why much of what you see on television about phenomena makes no attempt to establish the scientific fact of or disprove the claims about what is going on. Our thinking can become sloppy. There is an excellent section on the connection between race and success in sports that will make you rethink everything that you ever thought you knew in this subject. Why is it that no one claims that the Chinese have a genetic advantage in playing ping-pong? Did you know that it was once reported that Jewish people had a genetic advantage in playing basketball? Nature, nurture, opportunities and incentives are well explained in this section.In the people section, you see how the psychological profiles of the scientists play a big role in how they pursue their work. Those who are very open to new ideas can get drawn off into nonsense if they are not careful. You will also learn a little about how birth order affects our willingness to accept or challenge existing scientific ideas. With too little openness, the plain truth can be missed. There is a detailed example of how Darwin's approach to natural

Fuzzy Regions of Science

This book shows that science is much more than a collection of facts that point to a simple answer. The author uses a diversity of subject matter to illustrate that the quest for scientific knowledge can be hindered by cultural, political, and personal ideals, but that the self-correcting mechanism of science will eventually prevail. From the formulation of Darwin's ideas to the controversial claim that race plays a factor in athletic ability, the author shows how scientific ideas are constructed and either built upon or rejected.The information contained in this book makes for a very interesting read, but used as the tool it was written to be, it can show rational thinkers how to be more aware of their own biases that may cloud their thinking.
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