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Why Society Is A Complex Matter eBook

Meeting Twenty-First Century Challenges With A New Kind Of Science

by Philip Ball
language: english
Publisher: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, June of 2012 ‧
26,49€
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This book proposes that the complex systems view of social sciences has matured sufficiently to make it possible, desirable and perhaps essential to try formulating a unified scheme for studying, understanding and ultimately predicting the world we have made.

Why Society Is A Complex Matter

Meeting Twenty-First Century Challenges With A New Kind Of Science

by Philip Ball

Property Description
ISBN: 9783642290008
Publisher: Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Release Date: June of 2012
Language: English
Format: eBook
File Format and Compatibility: PDF para ADE
Categories: eBooks in English > Computing > Operating Systems and Networks
EAN: 9783642290008

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Philip Ball

Philip Ball is a writer and presenter. For over twenty years, he was an editor at the magazine. NatureHe regularly writes articles about science for the press and is the author of many books on the interactions between science, the arts, and culture in general, including H2O: A Biography of Water, Bright Earth: The Invention of Color, The Music Instinct and How Life WorksYour book Critical Mass won the Prize Aventis for Science Books (2005). In 2022, he was awarded the Medal Wilkins-Bernal-Medawar from the Royal Society which rewards contributions made to the history, philosophy, or social role of science. He graduated in Chemistry from the University of Oxford and in Physics from the University of Bristol.
The book Three Big Questions — (All) Science in just three questionsThis book, published by Planeta Tangerina, stemmed from his experience as an educator and father of two daughters, which compelled him to think about the most concise way possible to convey the essence of what science is. Much of science is not about getting the right answers, but about asking the right questions. Philip concludes that if children and young people can understand the three big questions in this book, they will have an idea of ​​what it means to think constructively about most of the science content they encounter in school curricula, and also in their lives.

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BY THE AUTHOR