Beschreibung
Is there a 'physics of society'? Philip Ball's investigation into human nature ranges from Hobbes and Adam Smith to modern work on traffic flow and market trading, across economics, sociology and psychology. Ball shows how much of human behaviour we can understand when we cease trying to predict and analyse the behaviour of individuals and look to the impact of hundreds, thousands or millions of individual human decisions, in circumstances in which human beings both co-operate and conflict, when their aggregate behaviour is constructive and when it is destructive. By perhaps Britain's leading young science writer, this is a deeply thought-provoking book, causing us to examine our own behaviour, whether in buying the new Harry Potter book, voting for a particular party or responding to the lures of advertisers.
Autorenportrait
Philip Ballwrites regularly in the scientific and popular media and worked for many years as an editor for physical sciences atNature. His books cover a wide range of scientific and cultural phenomena, and includeCritical Mass: How One Thing Leads To Another(winner of the 2005 Aventis Prize for Science Books),The Music Instinct,Curiosity: How Science Became Interested in Everything,Serving The Reich: The Struggle for the Soul of Science Under HitlerandInvisible: The history of the Unseen from Plato to Particle Physics.
Schlagzeile
The winner of the Aventis Prize for Science Books, this is a fascinating exploration of the age-old question: are there 'laws of nature' that guide human affairs? Is there anything inevitable about the ways humans behave and organise themselves? Do we have complete freedom in creating our societies, or are we trapped by 'human nature'?
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