Login
Register
Home || Search || About us || Blog || Contact us || Other book sites

Name: The Common Sense of Science

Author: Jacob Bronowski
Year: 1951
Rank:

Rating:

Original Rating:

Popularity: 1
Genres/categories: Science, Philosophy, Non Fiction

Purchase/research links:
J. Bronowski was both a distinguished mathematician and a poet, a philosopher of science and a literary critic who wrote a well-known study of William Blake. Dr. Bronowski's very career was founded on the premise of an intimate connection between science and the humanities, disciplines which are still generally thought to be worlds apart.

The Common Sense of Science, a book which remains as topical today as it was when it first appeared twenty-five years ago, articulates and develops Bronowski's provocative idea that the sciences and the arts fundamentally share the same imaginative vision.
Similar books:

The Seven Mysteries of Life
by Guy Murchie

The Mathematical Theory of Communication
by Claude E. Shannon

The Order of Time
by Carlo Rovelli

The Ascent of Man
by Jacob Bronowski

The Big Picture
by Sean Carroll

Life 3.0
by Max Tegmark

Brief Answers to the Big Questions
by Stephen Hawking

Unweaving the Rainbow: Science, Delusion and the Appetite for Wonder
by Richard Dawkins

The Age of Spiritual Machines
by Ray Kurzweil

Something Deeply Hidden
by Sean Carroll

Against Method
by Paul Feyerabend

Bad Astronomy
by Philip Plait

Wholeness and the Implicate Order
by David Bohm

Through Two Doors at Once
by Anil Ananthaswamy

Beyond Weird
by Philip Ball

Unweaving the Rainbow
by Richard Dawkins

The Life of the Cosmos
by Lee Smolin

Critical Path
by R. Buckminster Fuller

The Fabric of Reality
by David Deutsch

Lost in Math
by Sabine Hossenfelder