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The Hedgehog, The Fox And The Magister's Pox
The Hedgehog, The Fox And The Magister's Pox
Nov 16, 2024 5:34 AM

Author:Stephen Jay Gould

The Hedgehog, The Fox And The Magister's Pox

Completed shortly before his death, this is the last work of science from the most celebrated popular science writer in the world.

In characteristic form, Gould weaves the ideas of some of Western society's greatest thinkers, from Bacon to Galileo to E. O. Wilson, with the uncelebrated ideas of lesser-known yet pivotal intellectuals. He uses their ides to undo an assumption born in the seventeenth century and continuing to this day, that science and the humanities stand in opposition. Gould uses the metaphor of the hedgehog - who goes after one thing at a measured pace, systematically investigating all; the fox - skilled at many things, intuitive and fast; and the magister's pox - a censure from the Catholic Church involved in Galileo's downfall: to illustrate the different ways of responding to knowledge - in a scientific, humanistic or fearful way. He argues that in fact each would benefit by borrowing from the other.

Reviews

Pairs high brilliance with deep modesty.

—— New Humanist

Reading Gould is not merely a pleasure but an education and a chronicle of the times

—— Observer

Not only one of the finest scientific minds of the later twentieth century, but also one of its greatest polymaths

—— The Times

Gould strives to outline a more peaceful, mutually supportive view of the realtionship between the sciences and the humanities

—— Nature

One of the best essayists in the business. He uses his wide background knowledge...as a bridge to entice non-scientists into sharing the excitement of scientific discovery and the curious, convoluted path of new ideas through history

—— Scotsman

A fitting tribute to his career, as it combines, in both style and substance, the different themes of his life's work. Blending genuine literary talents with impeccable scientific credentials, Gould crafts an elegant entreaty for scientists and scholars to spend less time complaining about each other and more time combining their considerable resources. We need both the fox and the hedgehog in any intellectual menagerie - the persistent pluralist

—— Alan C. Hutchinson , Globe and Mail

A fresh, strange, and wonderful new voice in nature writing

—— Michael Pollan

A lovely little book. After all we've done to them it's great to see the animals getting their own back

—— Tony Fitzjohn, author of Born Wild

I wolfed it down

—— Will Self on The Red Hourglass

First-rate, unsentimental writing about nature and about the ways that human beings try to cope with the most terrible cruelties that nature offers up

—— The New York Times

Elegant and wryly funny

—— Esquire

The most polymathic science writer of our time

—— Peter Forbes , Independent, Books of the Year

An engaging and lively account of an endlessly curious man

—— Independent

A fascinating window into the complex emergent urban future. This book is an extremely sophisticated, often devastatingly witty and ironic, interpretation of what is possible over the next two decades

—— Saskia Sassen (author of TERRITORY, AUTHORITY, RIGHTS)

Throw out your old atlas. The new version is here

—— Walter Kirn (author of UP IN THE AIR)

Kasarda ... and Lindsay convincingly put the airport at the centre of modern urban life

—— Economist

Highly recommended

—— Library Journal
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