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Stina
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Dec 11, 2020 02:53PM

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Marie-thérèse wrote: "Do you consider a book about Arquitecture in Ancient Greece as Science ?
Or Farenheit 451 ?"
I'd call engineering a science, so architecture should fall under that. I'm not sure about Fahrenheit 451. It's been ages since I read it, but I don't remember anything sciencey about the actual story.
Or Farenheit 451 ?"
I'd call engineering a science, so architecture should fall under that. I'm not sure about Fahrenheit 451. It's been ages since I read it, but I don't remember anything sciencey about the actual story.
So far I'm counting Killer Chardonnay, which has bits of fermentation science and forensic science in it, and Sisters of the Vast Black, which has space nuns using their living ship to battle a plague. For all I know about such things, it may be bad science, but it's still science.
I'm not sure about counting Sooner or Later Everything Falls Into the Sea. It's a collection of short stories, and some of them are more science fiction than fantasy, but they are all pretty fantastical and really test the boundaries of sciencey.
I'm not sure about counting Sooner or Later Everything Falls Into the Sea. It's a collection of short stories, and some of them are more science fiction than fantasy, but they are all pretty fantastical and really test the boundaries of sciencey.

Maybe Farenheit 451, but for sure not the book about Griek arquitecture.
I will save my neck (I hope) with the paper and the exam: the subject is "Geographia Fisica e Ambiente".
So, physical geography, environment, global warming, deforestation, desertification, energy challenges.
(This was not my first choice to present here because it is in portuguese, and a book from the university only, I can not recommand an English edition, but for sure there are plenty)
I hope it is OK.

So, overall, not sure I would rec this to anyone - Going to pass it on to my work peeps as that is where it originally came from anyway.





I have that one on my wishlist....




It about emotional/physical burnout. I thought it was decent. The science was definitely written for the less scientifically minded audience, with lots of cute references and language that is also a bit cutesy, but I thought it made some good points. The best tip was to be sure to "complete the stress cycle". In other words, aside from dealing with stress itself, you need to deal with the adrenaline and cortisol that stress generates in order to relax. Doing something physical- exercising, walking, dancing, maybe creating something, is a good way to do this.
Stina wrote: "Fiction or nonfiction is fine as long as it features science. I see Hanging Falls: A Timber Creek K-9 Mystery, Book 6 on my January TBR, and it is bound to include some veterinary s..."
I did finish this one, and yes, it had a significant amount of veterinary and forensic sciences.
I did finish this one, and yes, it had a significant amount of veterinary and forensic sciences.
C wrote: "I just got How To: Absurd Scientific Advice for Common Real-World Problems out of the library, so I'm counting that. I may or may not finish it this weekend, but I'm counting it any..."
Gotta love xkcd!
Gotta love xkcd!
Marie-thérèse wrote: "So finally we are already on January 12, and I have a paper to write and an exam to prepare, so I will have no time to read any of these two books I proposed for the end of this month.
Maybe Faren..."
That sounds plenty sciencey! :-)
Maybe Faren..."
That sounds plenty sciencey! :-)
Angela wrote: "I finished my science book last night - The First 20 Minutes and while it did have a lot of good info - much of it was common sense (hey, movement is good for you). The biggest problem I had with i..."
Aagh, that sounds frustrating!
Aagh, that sounds frustrating!
Amy wrote: "For this topic, I read The Radium Girls: The Dark Story of America's Shining Women I found it engaging and horrifying."
I don't think I could handle that. I had a tough time reading The Only Harmless Great Thing, and that was clearly a fictional take on the topic.
I don't think I could handle that. I had a tough time reading The Only Harmless Great Thing, and that was clearly a fictional take on the topic.
Dawn wrote: "Cosmic Landscapes and the Illusion of Intelligent Design by Leonard Susskind"
Oooh, that sounds interesting! Beyond me, but interesting.
Oooh, that sounds interesting! Beyond me, but interesting.

Totally avoidable. It was a travesty, how it was handled by the corporation.

It is insane how badly the companies/government handled all of this. Especially considering they went through another round of it in the late 70s at one of the same locations. Ridiculous.

Books mentioned in this topic
The Only Harmless Great Thing (other topics)The Radium Girls: The Dark Story of America’s Shining Women (other topics)
How To: Absurd Scientific Advice for Common Real-World Problems (other topics)
Hanging Falls (other topics)
How To: Absurd Scientific Advice for Common Real-World Problems (other topics)
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