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The Big Questions in Science: The Quest to Solve the Great Unknowns

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What are the great scientific questions of our modern age and why don't we know the answers? This book takes on the most fascinating and pressing mysteries we have yet to crack and explains how tantalizingly close science is to solving them (or how frustratingly out of reach they remain).

173 pages, Paperback

First published September 12, 2013

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5 stars
5 (16%)
4 stars
13 (41%)
3 stars
10 (32%)
2 stars
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1 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Miranda Mayo.
64 reviews6 followers
May 21, 2018
3.5 stars. Some of the topics were super interesting, but overall I found the book kind of dry. The chapter about What's at the Bottom of the Ocean was my favourite. I really didn't like the layout of the book itself. The black pages weren't doing it for me and there were a few instances where you had to go back and forth between pages to find pictures and charts relevant to the paragraph at hand.
25 reviews
December 31, 2018
Good for a brief overview of modern ideas in the physical and mathematical sciences. Similar to what you hear in class condensed in one book. Could be useful as reference for topics of interest.
Profile Image for Anas.
91 reviews6 followers
November 2, 2021
consists of 20 questions, some are deep, others are shallow. each question is then elaborated into a 10ish pages of essay. again. some is comprehensive, some is not so much.
4 reviews
April 9, 2015
The only reason that this review isn't 5 stars is due to some of the questions being boring and drawn out. Other questions were brilliantly in-depth and detailed along with well described illustrations.

The book, rather than go off topic decides to put the correlated subject in question in a separate box, e.g. In chapter 2 it begins with the question, 'how did life first begin?', and in a separate box within that chapter is 'what did the first cells looks like?'. Correlated but not specifically on the topic, so hence the box to break up the questions. A very carefully laid out book.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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