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The Best
American Science Writing 2007

Review by John R. Guthrie
(With
appreciation to first publisher The
California Literary Review http://calitreview.com}
They were the fictional scientists who were the heroes and antiheroes of
childhood and youth: Professor Lidenbrock from Jules Vernes’s Journey to the Center of the Earth or
Dr. Clayton Forrester in The War of the Worlds. Many readers may
rediscover the thrill of such matinées and pulp
fictions from earlier years in The Best
American Science Writing 2007. In this annual compilation one encounters
men and women possessed of such remarkable talent, creativity and dedication
that they are far more interesting than their fictional counterparts. They come
from across the
Jonathon Keats’s article from Popular
Science recounts the work of the guru of artificial intelligence, John Koza, an adjunct professor at
(It is) Darwinian
evolution, the process of natural selection. Over and over, bits of
computer code are essentially procreating. Over the course of hundreds of
thousands of generations, the code evolves into off-spring so well-adapted for
its designated job that it is demonstrably superior to anything we can imagine.
The age of creative machines has arrived. And its prophet is John Koza.
Sylvia Nasar and David Gruber succeed in
making math at stratospheric levels fascinating for the non-mathematician. In
their article “Manifold Destiny,” they tell the story of reclusive Russian
mathematician Grigory Perelman of
Shang-Tung
Yau, a Chinese mathematician and a 1982 Fields Medal recipient, is shown to be
as self-aggrandizing as Perelman was humble. He is felt by many to have
attempted to unjustly transfer credit for the Poincaré Conjecture from the monastic Perelman to two of
his own graduate students, thus to shine in their reflected glory.
Nima Arkani-Hamed was born in 1972 in
the U.S., the child of two Iranian physicists. He became a Canadian citizen and
is now a Harvard professor, one revered by his students as an exceptionally
capable and concerned teacher as well as a star quality researcher. Taylor Cabot’s
accessible and finely written article from Esquire
illuminates Nima Arkani-Hamed’s innovative work with the Hadron Super Collider
in Geneva; “the greatest, the most anticipated, the most expensive experiment
in the history of mankind.” The Hadron Super Collider is the result of a team
effort by 20 nations. It consists of a 17 mile donut of tunnels with a diameter
that could readily accommodate an 18 wheeler. Its associated electronic
wizardry slams protons into each other at a speed that approximates that of
light. With this device, Nima Arkani-Hamed seeks to understand basic laws
governing the universe at every level, from subatomic particles to the cosmos
in its entirety.
None other than
Charles Darwin’s great-great grandson, Matthew Chapman, wrote the article from
Harpers covering the Dover, Pennsylvania Intelligent Design trial. Chapman is a
writer/film director now living in New York. His characterizations of the
principals in the Dover trial are telling and incisive: United States
District Judge John E. Jones
One Intelligent Design crusader and the chair
of the Dover school District curriculum committee, former prison guard Bill
Buckingham, is described as a “pugnacious, self-confessed Oxycontin-addicted
crusader ... (who) …testified in a low, mildly surly voice, a whine of
self-pity always underneath.” Chapman writes, tongue only partly in cheek,
that, “Dover lies only thirty miles from the Three Mile Island nuclear plant,
and the meltdown of its core and subsequent leak in the Seventies is
responsible (due to fear of things modern) for the weird behavior now seen in
the locals.”
This compendium of 20 articles from 11
magazines is somewhat weighted toward biomedical sciences. Surgeon Atul
Gawande, for instance, provides an artfully written history of Dr. Virginia
Apgar’s scoring system to rate the viability of newborns as well as other
advances that dramatically decrease the risk of childbirth to mother and child.
Dr. Gawande’s book Complications was
a National Book Award finalist.
New York City neurologist Oliver Sacks
contributed “Stereo Sue,” which originally appeared in The New Yorker. Sacks is acclaimed for his books The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat,
Awakenings, and most recently Musicophilia.
Born in the U.K., Dr. Sacks addresses
stereoscopic vision and the lack thereof in certain persons. It is provided by
having eyes that both look forward and are separated so that they perceive two
slightly different images. This binocular vision provides depth perception.
Sacks suggests that this provided a competitive edge for man as predator.
Another highlight of this book is
provided by New York Times Science and Medicine reporter Chris Grady. In “With
Lasers and Daring, Doctors Race to Save a Young Man’s Brain,” she tells the
story of Chris Ratuszny, a 26-year-old Lexus Mechanic from Lindenhurst, N.J.
Ratuszny began having headaches of dreadful intensity. At first they were
thought to be migraines, but when treatment proved to be ineffective, a
neurological workup to include an
The Best of Science Writing 2007 is an enjoyable
and thought-provoking read. I find myself wishing there was a comprehensive
index for this volume, but such is rare in this type of anthology. It is well
written enough to serve as a textbook for effective science writing. This book
is likely to be appreciated by many readers in the community at large as well
as in the scientific community. The Best
of Science Writing 2007 says a great deal about who we are as a people,
where we have been and where we are going.
Kolata, Gina,
Ed. and Jesse Cohen, Series Ed.
The
Best American Science Writing 2007.
New York:
Harper Perennial, 2007.
Softcover, 333
pages.
ISBN 978 0 06
134577 7
$24.95.
John R. Guthrie is a former Marine infantry
rifleman. He later studied medicine and became the commanding officer of a U.S.
Navy Reserve Shock Surgical Group. He is the editor and publisher of the
monthly webzine "The Chickasaw
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