Science Matters: Achieving Scientific Literacy
by
Robert M. Hazen & James Trefil
Order:
USA
Can
Anchor, 2009 (2009)
Reviewed by Deb Kincaid
'
... fewer than 7 percent of American adults can be classed as scientifically literate,
' say the authors of
Science Matters: Achieving Scientific Literacy
. And the authors aim to do their part in ramping up that percentage by means of books such as this one that make science tenets, principles, theorems, and laws understandable to all, not just scientists. Why?
A
uthors Hazen and Trefil feel that politically-relevant issues such as stem cells, global warming, and biotechnology require scientific literacy of citizens for good decision making. Today's decisions will likely affect generations to come.
A
re you baffled by the relationship between electricity, magnetism, and radiation? Flummoxed by the terms
quantum mechanics
and
nanotechnology
? Confused by the whole wacky weather stuff? If you've ever thought molecular biology, quantum physics, and study of the cosmos were beyond your reach - and perhaps even irrelevant, you're mistaken.
Science Matters
opens up to us numerous fields of science, and explains our inseparableness from them.
A
new addition to this revision of
Science Matters
is a chapter discussing biotechnology. Naturally, the topic of evolution carries over from the original version. One wonders if a later revision of
Science Matters
will address the significant evidence of design and intelligence in nature, which is even now prompting scientists to abandon evolutionary theory. Whatever the case, readers of
Science Matters
will more fully appreciate the interrelated dynamics of our universe.
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