Perfect for "Did you know . . .?" barroom conversations, this handy volume--intended more as a reference book for browsing than a sequential narrative--includes a chapter on the top 10 problems in modern science and explains the outer frontiers of current biology and physics knowledge to the layman. String theory, neurobiology, chaos theory: all are touched on lightly and concisely as Trefil describes key concepts in a broad range of scientific enigmas. With its excellent bibliography, this book could provide the springboard for many further excursions in scientific literature.
From Publishers Weekly
Overlook the fatuous subtitle; here is a competent and sometimes fascinating tour of the frontiers of scientific inquiry. Trefil, a physicist with 20 previous popular science titles to his credit, has chosen an interesting premise: drawing from all the major disciplines, he presents 101 scientific questions, their theoretical underpinnings and likely resolutions, each in no more than three pages. Lay readers will appreciate being able to satisfy their curiosity about the likelihood of time travel, the causes of cancer and the future of the computer with this user-friendly resource. Trefil has a gift for constructing useful analogies?it is no mean feat to explain quasars or dark matter or the intricacies of the human immune system in just a few pages. However, the book lacks an overarching theme, unless it is a pervasive admiration for the accomplishments of the scientific community, and lacks connective tissue between sections and chapters. Readers may wonder how fuzzy logic, treated in one chapter, relates to the binary functioning of computers, discussed in several others. But they will come away sharing the author's respect and awe for the achievements of those who scan the geometric surfaces of viruses and construct molecular remedies for deadly diseases, probe the chaotic system of the earth's atmosphere and even try to save us from our genetically encoded craving for fat.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.








