7 /10 1 Votes
Country United States Publication date December 9, 2004 OCLC 55682384 Publisher Times Books | 3.5/5 Language English ISBN 0-8050-7708-1 Originally published 9 December 2004 Genre Science Subjects Science, Pseudoscience | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Media type Print (Hardcover and Paperback) Preceded by The Science of Good and Evil Similar Why Darwin Matters, The Science of Good and, The borderlands of science, The mind of the market, How We Believe |
Science Friction: Where the Known Meets the Unknown is a 2004 book by Michael Shermer, a historian of science and founder of The Skeptics Society. It contains thirteen essays about "personal barriers and biases that plague and propel science, especially when scientists push against the unknown. What do we know, and what do we not know?" These include an essay relating the author's experience of a day spent learning cold reading techniques well enough to be accepted as a psychic. As well as covering skepticism and pseudoscience, Shermer discusses other topics touching on the subject of encouraging scientific thought, such as sport psychology and the writings of Stephen Jay Gould.
References
Science Friction: Where the Known Meets the Unknown Wikipedia(Text) CC BY-SA