I tried very hard to like this book. Honestly, I did. I mean, Freeman Dyson, nuclear physicist and designer of nuclear-powered spacecraft. The Dyson in the Dyson sphere. A top scientific philosopher and thinker, and an excellent writer. Any of his writing and thoughts should be worth reading. So I was excited to be asked to take on this review.
But oh my goodness, this book is a sprawling mess. Dwight Neuenschwander is credited as editor, but he鈥檚 really its author. He鈥檚 also the director of a science, technology and society course at Southern Nazarene University in Oklahoma, and this book is as much about the course as it is about Dyson and his writing. The connecting strand is that Dyson鈥檚 book Disturbing the Universe is the course鈥檚 primary textbook, and Dyson has graciously agreed to correspond with students on the course over the years, and answer their questions.
Now, I鈥檓 a huge fan of science and society courses, and I鈥檇 jump at the chance to teach one. And this book does have some great, solid-gold nuggets about the course content, with my favourite being the anecdote about Neuenschwander鈥檚 students being taken to a dissection laboratory to discover that the cadavers they will be dissecting are in fact lawnmower engines. A book about the course itself would be an interesting read. Unfortunately, this narrative gets mixed up with the Dyson question-and-answer sessions, and biographical information about Dyson and his family, and so the book ends up like a vast urban sprawl with no clear road signs. Some of the questions posed by the students are extremely good, and Dyson鈥檚 answers are as insightful as I had anticipated, but you have to work hard to find them. This really should be two smaller books, one about the course, and one comprising Dyson鈥檚 correspondence. In this case, the sum of the parts is just very confusing.
Then, just to compound the confusion and sprawl, we have a touch of the Fonty McTypefaces in the book design. No fewer than five fonts have been used, each one representing a different 鈥渋nput stream鈥 of information. It reminds me of computer programming in Fortran. You have to read the introduction carefully to find this out, and if you don鈥檛, you鈥檒l face a massive cognitive overload when you start to read the book. If you turn to a page at random, you鈥檙e likely to find at least three typefaces being used, which is both disturbing and visually unappealing. It鈥檚 impossible to remember which typeface goes with each input stream. Moreover, the Fortran metaphor runs true for the whole book. As scientists of a certain age know, Fortran programs can easily degenerate into an unstructured mess that is impossible for the outsider to decipher.
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As a result, I can鈥檛 really recommend this book as a good, easy read. It鈥檚 a great pity, as there is some really good material in here, but it鈥檚 crying out for an editor to edit the prose written by the 鈥渆ditor鈥. If you want to read Dyson, try Infinite In All Directions as a starting point. His books are much more readable.
Andrew Robinson is a contract instructor in physics, Carleton University, Ottawa. He blogs at .
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Dear Professor Dyson: Twenty Years of Correspondence Between Freeman Dyson and Undergraduate Students on Science, Technology, Society and Life
Edited by Dwight Neuenschwander
World Scientific, 436pp, 拢44.00, 拢24.00 and 拢19.00
ISBN 9789814675840, 5857 and 5871 (e-book)
Published 1 May 2016
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: There鈥檚 gold in them thar hills
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