This collection of essays and articles range across the author's many interests including theoretical physics, the origins of life, technological development, the bomb and nuclear politics.
From Eros to Gaia Summary
From Eros to Gaia by Freeman J. Dyson
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Table of Contents
Part Stories: Sir Phillip Robert's Erolunar Collision (1933); on being the right size - reflections on the ecology of scientific projects (1988); six cautionary tales for scientists (1988); telescopes and accelerators (1988); sixty years of space science, 1958-2018 (1988); the importance of being unpredictable (1990); strategic bombing in World War II and today - has anything changed? (1990). Part 2 Things: field theory (1953); innovation in physics (1958); Tomonaga, Schwinger, and Feynman awarded Nobel Prize for physics (1965); energy in the universe (1971); carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and the biosphere (1990). Part 3 Instititions: the future of physics (1970); unfashionable pursuits (1981); astronomy in a private sphere (1984); to teach or not to teach (1990). Part 4 Politics: Pugwash 1962 (1962); death of a project (1965); human consequences of the exploration of space (1968); the hidden costs of saying no (1974). Part 5 Books: Pupin (1960); Oppenheimer (1980); Heims (1980); Manin and Forman (1982); Kennan (1982); Oppenheimer again (1989); Morson and Tolstoy (1989). Part 4 People: letter from America (1971); brittle silence (1981); Helen Dukas (1982); Paul Dirac (1986); Beacons (1988); Kennan again (1988); Feynman in 1948 (1989); the face of Gaia (1989).
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