If like me you are interested in science you will probably already know some of the experiments listed in this book. For example those by Pavlov and Skinner, the webs woven by spiders on drugs, the Stanley Milgram obedience experiments and the prison experiment gone wild by Philip Zimbardo. However, most of the described experiments, especially the more bizarre ones, were new to me, and even for the well known ones the book adds often some interesting new details and extra background information. The organization is chronological, which gives not only a nice illustration of the development of scientific thought, but also of the boundaries of experimental ethics. Most experiments are described in short sections ranging from one to four pages. This makes the book an ideal companion on short trips or for a quick read before going to sleep. However, in the latter case you might want to avoid the scarier ones such as the two-headed dog that was surgically created by prof. Mikhail Razgulov. On the other hand that might be exactly that type of thing that would make you pick up the book.
Lots of entertaining 1-5 page long accounts of discovery as well as disappointment, ranging from the kooky to the ingenious! Also includes links to find out more!
Een chronologische opsomming van "bizarre" experimenten. Prima om elke dag een of twee stukjes te lezen. Ik heb de indruk dat de auteur experimenten sneller "bizar" noemt als ze minder smakelijk zijn, sommige zijn zeker niet geschikt om voor het slapen gaan te lezen.
Verder is het jammer (doch logisch) dat er veel meer (redelijk) recente experimenten beschreven staan dan oude. De oudere experimenten zijn veel exotischer dan veel nieuwere. Een strengere selectie was een optie geweest.
This was a fun book to read based on the fact that I love reading about experiments that people do. It was interesting to read about all the different things that have been done in the past, especially in the 1800's. I found that it wasn't as "exciting", if that's the right word, as it got into the last 50 pages or so because the rules of ethics they started to create due to some of the experiments. That sounds horrible, but you have to admit that freaky stuff if pretty interesting. I also really liked that it had a website with it so you could watch videos, read some of the info related to the experiment, and sometimes have a hands-on demo to understand it better (such as the Doppler effect). Pretty sweet :)
Ok first off this book is almost impossible to read straight through, it is basically a whole list from ancient times up to 2003 of strange amazing and down right bizarre experiments. there are some very famous ones in there (or I am just reading totally the wrong sort of books) but they are all fascinating although rather heavy on the physiology experiments. Its a fascinatig book which i think really should be dipped in to or referred to more than read from cover to cover.
Schneider admits that this is just a collection of stories which he didn't get a chance to publish elsewhere, and although he has arranged them in chronological order they still feel random. Most of them are not "mad science" at all, but sensible experiments, and I found myself skipping lots of them because they were too familiar - Milgram again. The typography didn't help, hard on the eyes.
The writing isn't great, but the content is pretty interesting. About half of it was social psychology experiments, but then there were some other good ones like the Soviet guy that made two-headed dogs (one lived for 29 days).
Finished this book 2nd time - 1st time was probably 10 years ago. Still fascinated by how far scientists were willing to go to nudge a little secret out of nature. Many were in psychology field though, which may not be counted as science...but I digress.
A series of unusual experiments are described in this book.
Some of the experiments / tests were interesting (these were the more famous ones which have been covered before) but the majority were a bit dull and the writing was dry.