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Patterns in Nature

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From the dust jacket:

And this our life, exempt from public haunt,
Finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks,
Sermons in stones, and good in everything.
Shakespeare,
AS YOU LIKE IT, Act II, Sc. I

In a stunning synthesis of art and science, Peter Stevens explores the universal patterns in which nature expresses herself. He provides a fresh way of viewing and understanding the physical world.

“When we see how the branching of trees resembles the branching of arteries and the branching of rivers, how crystal grains look like soap bubbles and the plates of a tortoise’s shell, how the fiddleheads of ferns, stellar galaxies, and water emptying from the bathtub spiral in a similar manner, then we cannot help but wonder why nature uses only a few kindred forms in so many contexts…It turns out that those patterns and forms are peculiarly restricted, that the immense variety that nature creates emerges from the working and reworking of only a few formal themes.”

In elegant and lucid prose, illuminated by hundreds of extraordinary photographs and geometrical drawings, Stevens examines those themes – spirals, meanders, branching patterns, explosions – and explains how they evolve according to the laws of stress, flow, turbulence, least effort, surface tension, close packing, and most important, the constraints of three-dimensional space. Steven’s insights about space and its limitations enable us to compare a lightning stroke with the tributaries of a river, and a splash of milk with galaxies in the heavens. He explores the spiral of a seashell, the markings of a giraffe, the spikes of an inkblot. His investigation carries him from the evolution of trees to the drifting of the continents, from the packing of billiard balls to black holes in space, and everywhere he rigorously shows us not only the individual beauty of natural objects, but the underlying harmony that they share.

PATTERNS IN NATURE is a pleasure to read and to behold, a vivid and original piece of scholarship whose implications will influence scientists, architects and engineers for years to come – and whose aesthetic truth will enrich our appreciation of the natural world.

240 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1974

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Peter S. Stevens

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
583 reviews11 followers
April 12, 2018
I loved this book when I read the office copy during my lunch hour at a summer job. This heavy on the pictures, light on the math but thete is some, and I think the average lay reader will learn some interesting things by reading and looking at this.

Peter Stevens was, at the time, an architect, head of the architectural planning office at Harvard Medical school. I worked for the safety office which was co-located in a small office, and was aquainted with Stevens but did not work with him.
Profile Image for Brandon Woodward.
110 reviews3 followers
April 3, 2021
I bought this on a whim at a used bookstore and ended up really loving it! There are so many interesting explanations for how nature forms common patterns along with a plethora of beautiful images. All this despite it being written 45 years ago :)
Profile Image for Arun Vasireddy.
8 reviews18 followers
July 25, 2017
Cherry-picked data clusters to suit narrative at many places, specially to highlight the importance of Fibonacci series and Golden ratio. Otherwise, a good read.
Profile Image for LucianTaylor.
195 reviews2 followers
May 17, 2019
A wonderful book to understand the geometry and morphology in the universe and specially in living matter. The mysteries behind the forms and systems that manifest in life.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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