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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
26 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The shaper of minds : Mr. Bronowski,
By Ashwin (Bangalore, India) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Origins of Knowledge and Imagination (The Mrs. Hepsa Ely Silliman Memorial Lectures Series) (Paperback)
Bronowski at his glittering brilliance in this book, is the memory I carry at the end of reading it, filled with a warmth of understanding and a calmness of knowledge.It is not easy to find someone as wonderfully coherent and structured and yet intelligent and powerful in ideology, and yet so simple and easy to understand by the lay reader. Bronowski's series of lecture presentations here attempts as he himself says, to complete what Kant set out to do... to create a philosophy of mankind that is based on man's perceptual tools of biology. In this task, Bronowski succeeds brilliantly. Starting with vision, through hearing, through language itself... Bronowski builds up a picture of human thought and action like never before and the essays read like a thriller through our own minds and its origins. If Ascent of Man was groundbreaking, this book is breathtaking in its scope and parallel simplicity.
39 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An Interesting Approach to Epistemology,
This review is from: The Origins of Knowledge and Imagination (The Mrs. Hepsa Ely Silliman Memorial Lectures Series) (Paperback)
The late Jacob Bronowski delivered this series of lectures at Yale a quarter century ago, and it displays his enormous talent for making difficult material accessible. He looks at Godel's argument that any system built upon a consistent set of axioms will generate theorems that are true but that cannot be proved. He then develops this delicious paradox beyond mathematics to the broad sweep of human knowledge. He suggests that because all that we can know is interrelated, but for purposes of research and understanding we discard from consideration what seems irrelevant, our conclusions inevitably must be tentative and subject to revision as the weight of the discarded material is addressed by subsequent scholars and scientists. This is a stimulating books with but one major flaw. In the last of his essays, he suggests that the standards of scientific honesty that have advanced scientific knowledge so significantly in the last 300 years ought to be applied to problems of governance. But sadly, theories of governance are not subject to rigorous testing and replication by others the way theories of science are.A good read.
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
twentieth century book,
By DAVID OKER (Alpine, california United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Origins of Knowledge and Imagination (The Mrs. Hepsa Ely Silliman Memorial Lectures Series) (Paperback)
A very unifying book. Creativity comes about by means of viewing some other new subject from the perspective of a subject or set of skills already mastered. Jacob Bronowski creates a world view from the Human perspective.The last chapter is about the spirituality and ethics that comes out of the activity of doing science. With reference to the review before this one, while governments don't set their ideas by persueing truth, they do so at their peril. A human lifetime might not be able to detect the fall of a nation, but the reason nations fall is because they did not base decisions on sound reasoning.
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