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More And Different: Notes From A Thoughtful Curmudgeon 1st Edition

4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 23 ratings

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Named a Top Five Book of 2012 by Physics Today, USA."Anderson has put together an entertaining and instructive collection of highly readable reviews, columns, talks, and unpublished essays on science and the scientists he has known. He is rarely inappropriately provocative, and he is a pleasure to read."Physics TodayPhilip Anderson was educated at University High School in Urbana, Illinois, at Harvard (BS 1943, PhD 1949), and further educated at Bell Laboratories, where his career (1949-1984) coincided with the greatest period of that remarkable institution. Starting in 1967, he shared his time with Cambridge University (until 1975) and then with Princeton, where he continued full time as Joseph Henry Professor until 1997. As an emeritus he remains active in research, and at press time he was involved in several scientific controversies about high profile subjects, in which his point of view, though unpopular at the moment, is likely to prevail eventually. His colleagues have made him one of the two physicists most often cited in the scientific literature, for several decades.His work is characterized by mathematical simplicity combined with conceptual depth, and by profound respect for experimental findings. He has explored areas outside his main discipline, the quantum theory of condensed matter (for which he won the 1977 Nobel Prize), on several occasions: his paper on what is now called the "Anderson-Higgs mechanism" was a main source for Peter Higgs' elucidation of the boson; a crucial insight led to work on the dynamics of neutron stars (pulsars); and his concept of the spin glass led far afield, to developments in practical computer algorithms and neural nets, and eventually to his involvement in the early years of the Santa Fe Institute and his co-leadership with Kenneth Arrow of two influential workshops on economics at that institution. His writing career started with a much-quoted article in Science titled "More is Different" in 1971; he was an occasional columnist for Physics Today in the 1980s and 1990s. He was more recently a reviewer of science and science-related books for the Times (London) Higher Education Supplement as well as an occasional contributor to Science, Nature, and other journals.

Editorial Reviews

Review

Anderson has put together an entertaining and instructive collection of highly readable reviews, columns, talks, and unpublished essays on science and the scientists he has known. He is rarely inappropriately provocative, and he is a pleasure to read. -- Physics Today "Physics Today"

From the Back Cover

Philip Anderson was educated at University High School in Urbana, Illinois, at Harvard (BS 1943, PhD 1949), and further educated at Bell Laboratories, where his career (1949-1984) coincided with the greatest period of that remarkable institution. Starting in 1967, he shared his time with Cambridge University (until 1975) and then with Princeton, where he continued full time as Joseph Henry Professor until 1997. As an emeritus he remains active in research, and at press time he was involved in several scientific controversies about high profile subjects, in which his point of view, though unpopular at the moment, is likely to prevail eventually. His colleagues have made him one of the two physicists most often cited in the scientific literature, for several decades.

His work is characterized by mathematical simplicity combined with conceptual depth, and by profound respect for experimental findings. He has explored areas outside his main discipline, the quantum theory of condensed matter (for which he won the 1977 Nobel Prize), on several occasions: his paper on what is now called the "Anderson-Higgs mechanism" was a main source for Peter Higgs' elucidation of the boson; a crucial insight led to work on the dynamics of neutron stars (pulsars); and his concept of the spin glass led far afield, to developments in practical computer algorithms and in neural nets, and eventually to his involvement in the early years of the Santa Fe Institute and his co-leadership with Kenneth Arrow of two influential workshops on economics at that institution. His writing career started with a much-quoted article in Science titled "More is Different" in 1971; he was an occasional columnist for Physics Today in the 1980s and 1990s. He was more recently a reviewer of science- and science-related books for the Times (London) Higher Education Supplement as well as an occasional contributor to Science, Nature, and other journals.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Wspc; 1st edition (September 1, 2011)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 422 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9814350133
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-9814350136
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.6 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.5 x 0.96 x 9.75 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 23 ratings

Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
23 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on February 5, 2012
The Nobel Prize-winning physicist Philip Anderson is one of those rare species - a scientist who is not only world-class in his own field but who seems capable of saying something interesting about virtually every topic under the sun. His career at Bell Labs overlapped with the lab's most illustrious period and apart from his prizewinning work in solid-state physics, Anderson has made groundbreaking contributions to at least two other diverse fields - particle physics and the epistemology of science. In this book he holds forth on a wide variety of subjects ranging from postmodernism to superconductivity. The chapters consist of book reviews, commemorative essays, transcripts of talks, opinion pieces and a variety of other writings over the past five decades. In every chapter there are at least a few rather deep statements which deserve close scrutiny.

The book is roughly divided into three parts. The first part details Anderson's views on the history and philosophy of science including his own field - solid-state physics. The second part talks about Anderson's reminiscences and thoughts on his scientific peers, mostly in the form of book reviews that he has written for various magazines and newspapers. The third part deals with science policy and politics and the fourth is dedicated to "attempts" (in Anderson's own rather self-effacing words) at popularizing science.

Some of the chapters are full of scientific details and can be best appreciated by physicists but there's also a lot of fodder for the layman in here. A running thread through several essays is Anderson's criticism of ultra-reductionism in science which is reflected in the title of the book, "More and Different". Anderson's basic viewpoint is that more is not just quantitatively but qualitatively different from less. In 1972 he made a splash by discussing in an article in Science magazine how "higher-level" sciences are based on their own fundamental laws which cannot be reduced to physics. In the book he details this philosophy through several examples from physics, chemistry, biology and psychology. He does not deny the great value of reductionism in the development of modern science but he incisively explores its limits.

Other chapters contain critiques of the latest fads in physics including string theory. Anderson bemoans string theory's lack of connection to concrete experiment and its failure to predict unique, robust solutions. He makes it clear that string theory is really mathematics and that it fails to adhere to the tried and tested philosophy of science which has been successful for almost five hundred years. Other chapters have insightful commentary on the role of mathematics in physics, Bayesian probability and physics at Bell Labs. A particularly amusing essay critiquing the current funding situation in the United States proposes a hypothetical alternative history of quantum mechanics in the US, where scientific pioneers like Dirac and Heisenberg may not have been able to do groundbreaking research because of the publish-or-perish environment and the dominance of the old guard.

There's also some valuable material in here about the sociology of science. This is exemplified by an especially insightful and detailed chapter on scientific fraud where Anderson explores the reasons why some scientists commit fraud and others don't expose it as widely as they should. In Anderson's opinion the most valuable method to expose fraud is to ask whether it destroys what he calls the "seamless web of science" - the existing framework of fundamental laws and principles that allow relatively little room for revolutionary breakthroughs on a regular basis. In many cases the web's integrity is clearly not consistent with the new finding, and the rare case where the web can subsume the new discovery and still stay intact leads us into genuinely new scientific territory. He also takes scientists to task for failing to point out the destruction of this seamless web by apparently far-reaching but fundamentally flawed new discoveries. In other chapters Anderson also comes down hard on the postmodernism distortion of science, critiquing such philosophers as Nancy Cartwright and upholding the views of debunkers like Alan Sokal. He also has some valuable commentary on science policy, especially on Star Wars and missile defense. Other writers have written much more detailed critiques of such programs, but Anderson succinctly demonstrates the limitations of the concept using commonsense thinking (The bottom line: decoys can easily foil the system and a marginal improvement by the offense will result in a vastly increased cost for the defense).

Finally, the book contains mini sketches of some of Anderson's peers who happened to be some of the great scientific minds of the twentieth century. Anderson reviews books by and about Richard Feynman, Murray Gell-Mann, Stuart Kauffman, Stephen Hawking, Roger Penrose, John Bardeen and William Shockley among others. I happen to agree with him that books by scientists like Hawking, Penrose and Greene, while fascinating to read, paint a rather biased picture of physics and science. For one thing, they usually oversell the whole reductionist methodology in their constant drive to advertise the "Theory of Everything". But more importantly, they make it sound like particle physics and cosmology are the only games in town worth thinking about and that everything else in physics is done on the periphery. This is just not true. As Anderson makes it clear, there are lots of fields of physics including condensed matter physics, biophysics and non-linear dynamics which contain questions as exciting, fundamental and research-worthy as anything else in science. As just one example, classical physics was considered a staid old backwater of the physics world until chaos burst upon the scene. It's also clear, as was the case with chaos, that some of the most exciting advances will come from non-physicists. There are foundational phenomena and rich dividends to be mined from the intersection of physics with other fields in the twenty-first century.

Anderson's book might precisely be the kind of writing ignored by the public because they are too taken with the Hawkings, Greenes and Randalls. To those folks this volume would be an essential and healthy antidote. There's something in there for everyone, and it makes it clear that science still presents infinite horizons on every level. After all, more is different.
35 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on September 29, 2012
The first few chapters present a very personal and explicit history of certain aspects of condensed matter physics by one of the major players. The feeling I got from it is not unlike the one I had in the late 60s when "The Double Helix" came out in installments in the Atlantic Monthly.  The Double Helix: A Personal Account of the Discovery of the Structure of DNA . As a matter of fact, Anderson praises both Watson and his book.

To give a very short summary, as a by product of their work on superconductivity and other things, the condensed matter physicists introduced symmetry breaking. Then the particle physicists used it to form the Standard Model, at the same time teaching the condensed matter physicists some theoretical techniques, thereby repaying them. Anderson produced the so-called Anderson-Higgs mechanism, which led to the Higgs field and the Higgs boson.

The other chapters are also excellent. Some are book reviews of biographies of important players in the same drama.
5 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 18, 2015
Of most interest to readers with a strong physics background. My interest was primarily in the chapters on emergence. These were worth the price of the book to me.
Reviewed in the United States on March 15, 2014
Phil Anderson’s most recent collection of essays highlights the portion of his career that has been dedicated to thinking about, rather than doing science. Such reflection is a common avocation among physicists, and Anderson has an uncommon gift for resisting the temptations of glib generalization and grandiose rhetoric, which so frequently beguile the reflexive physicist. The essays Anderson highlights here are predominantly purpose-written pieces—editorials, book reviews, lectures, etc. We are permitted thereby to see Anderson and his views in context, rather than filtered through the lens of hindsight. The volume is an excellent compendium of the portion of Anderson’s career for which, justly or not, he is best known.

Emergence is the watchword that sums up Anderson’s agenda. If the sum of this book’s essays can be said to have a common goal, it is the advancement of the idea that science, in its most fascinating, fruitful, and as yet poorly understood form, grapples with how to understand complex phenomena by examining how new, novel, unpredictable laws emerge from simple constituents. Anderson recalls arriving at this view through his own scientific work, particularly in the aftermath of the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer theory of superconductivity, which awakened the physics community to the importance of spontaneous symmetry breaking. He also extends this view beyond physics, to the “seamless web” of science as a whole, embracing—reservedly—the hope that techniques honed investigating complex physical systems might offer insight to the study of complex biological, social, and economic systems.

Seen as a paean for emergence, the book might be split roughly in half. Anderson develops his emergentist view of science in the first. In the second, we see it applied to a series of debates, of both contemporary and historical interest. The first half begins with a series of historical recollections. The most substantial of these are the two chapters, excerpts from Anderson’s unpublished history of superconductivity. These strike a balance between biographical background and clear exposition of conceptual details. Sections III and IV contain what is likely to be the most interesting material for many readers. They outline Anderson’s views on emergence, present his attack on reductionist theories of everything, and outline thoughts on how a national science infrastructure organized his way might look.

The second half is less focused. Its many tangents include reflections on the nature of scientific genius, lamentations about the hopelessness of futurology, arguments against the wisdom of Strategic Defense Initiatives, and a small spat with Nancy Cartwright over the epistemological foundations of science. Section IX on complexity picks up the thread of the first half again before the final section, “Popularization Attempts,” attempts to articulate what it is condensed matter physicists do in a manner that is, alas, likely to exceed the grasp of most lay readers; Anderson’s scrupulous habit of presenting his arguments in all their nuance and complexity, which is an asset elsewhere, makes him a poor popularizer. The winding path the second half takes, while it does not directly advance the objectives evident in the first, nonetheless provides several instructive examples of how Anderson’s distinctive take on science plays out in actual political, scientific, and philosophical controversies.

My biggest gripe is that the book feels slapped together. Many of its 10 sections appear to be ad hoc devices minted solely to impose some semblance of structure on its 55 essays. Several of the later sections contain primarily book reviews. Although Anderson does use the occasion of reviewing a book to expound on his own views, these sections are thin compared with earlier, more substantive sections. The text contains a larger than average number of typographical errors, further reinforcing the unpolished feel. Sparse annotations leave the provenance of many of the essays unclear, and Anderson’s perfunctory introductions to each section give the impression that he set out to write a popularly accessible book articulating his distinctive view of science, only to discover that, in aggregate, he already had. That said, the unmanicured quality that results conveys a sharper sense of Anderson’s views and their development than a more polished work might have. Although a lay reader might find its meandering off-putting, historians and physicists will appreciate the way this book chronicles the evolution of one of the sharpest critical voices in American science.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2013
This book encouraged me to read more by the author, and led me to other books in the area, such as the excellent biography of Fritz London.
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Top reviews from other countries

Robert Jones
4.0 out of 5 stars A good read, but no index and few dates on individual chapters
Reviewed in Germany on May 24, 2013
Many interesting comments from an outstanding scientist. The book has no index, and the dates of the individual chapters are often missing. These are negative features, but it is a good read, particularly for condensed matter scientists.
Brian R. Martin
4.0 out of 5 stars The views of a remarkable scientist
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 13, 2011
Philip Anderson, the doyen of condensed matter physics, was one of a remarkable group of outstanding scientists who worked at the Bell Research Labs during its golden years that saw, amongst many other things, the construction of the first semiconductor amplifier, which gave rise to the modern electronics industry. He joined Bell Labs in 1949 and stayed until 1984, when the lab was closed, and in 1977 was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on the quantum theory of condensed matter. He is now aged 88 and still an active participant in research and scientific matters in general.

The book is a collection of his writings on scientific and other topics, some new some reprinted, but all are still fresh, relevant, and often provocative. Its title - More and Different -is taken from a widely quoted article with the same title he wrote in 1971. What it means is clearly explained in the contribution called `Emergence vs. Reductionism'. Anderson is a strong advocate of the former, which is the view that totally new physics can emerge when systems get large, and that they have properties that are independent of the underlying laws with no reference to them. This is generally anathema to the views of reductionists, such as most particle physicists, who believe that everything is ultimately explainable in terms of the properties of the simplest particles and anything else is `just detail'.

The articles cover a wide range of topics: science strategy, the nature of genius, the early exciting days at the Bell Labs, the interaction of politics and science, fraud and delusion in science, the importance of broken symmetry, and the future of science, to name just a few. Some of the articles are technical and will be difficult to follow without a good knowledge of condensed matter physics, but others are not and should be of interest to the general reader. However, I do wonder who the book was aimed at. For example, during Anderson's long scientific career he has met numerous scientists and collaborated with many of them, so his reminiscences are fascinating for other physicists, but the many names that crop up will not mean much to the general reader. Nevertheless, if you are one of the latter and are prepared to accept that not every contribution will be intelligible, there is much to enjoy here in the no-nonsense views, often controversial but always clearly stated, of one of the most influential scientists of the second half of the twentieth century.
Robert H. B. Temas
3.0 out of 5 stars More and different
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 2, 2014
It was an interesting book that contained a number of insights from Nobel Prize winner Philip Anderson. I originally bought the book to find out more about the origins of complexity science, but found the book to be a digest of thoughts with good news and bad news on the philosophy of science, science tactics and strategy, science wars, complexity science and futurology. However I got good value from reading it, and the book can only help scientific researchers to raise their game in a fiercely competitive world.