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Book : Galileos Middle Finger Heretics, Activists, And One..

Modelo 43108115
Fabricante o sello Penguin Books
Peso 0.27 Kg.
Precio:   $69,539.00
Si compra hoy, este producto se despachara y/o entregara entre el 15-05-2025 y el 25-05-2025
Descripción
-Titulo Original : Galileos Middle Finger Heretics, Activists, And One Scholars Search For Justice

-Fabricante :

Penguin Books

-Descripcion Original:

Review New York Times Book Review“[A] smart, delightful book. Galileo’s Middle Finger is many things: a rant, a manifesto, a treasury of evocative new terms (sissyphobia, autogynephyllia, phall-o-meter) and an account of the author’s transformation “from an activist going after establishment scientists into an aide-de-camp to scientists who found themselves the target of activists like me”--and back again... I suspect most readers will find that [Dreger’s] witnessing of these wild skirmishes provides a splendidly entertaining education in ethics, activism and science.”Chicago TribuneDreger tells the story in her new book on scientific controversies, Galileos Middle Finger: Heretics, Activists, and the Search for Justice in Science, an engrossing volume that is sure to undo any lingering notions that academic debate is the province of empiricists who pledge allegiance to the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth... Dregers clear and well-paced prose makes for compelling-and depressing-reading. If you believe what you were taught about scientific method, about old ideas giving way under the sway of new evidence, youre an idealist and you probably know that already. The truth is sometimes closer to the much-repeated notion that a new idea cant truly take hold until the people who held the old idea die.Salon : Galileo’s Middle Finger offers a trench-level account of several hot scientific controversies from the past 30 years, told with the page-turning verve of an expose.Forbes : “Lying and deceit have been around for a long time-forever, probably-but what makes Dreger’s book so compelling is where she dug them up: among health activists, academics and ethicists who we normally associate with honesty and integrity…. Like her hero Galileo, Dreger believes that the ‘real’ truth does exist and we are all for the worse when we don’t seek it out. It is an argument that deserves more of our attention.”Nature: “Dreger ends this powerful book by call­ing for her fellow academics to counter the ‘stunningly lazy attitude toward pre­cision and accuracy in many branches of academia.’ In her view, chasing grants and churning out papers now take the place of quality and truth. It is a situation exacerbated by a media that can struggle when covering scientific controversies, and by strong pres­sures from activists with a stake in what the evidence might say. She argues, ‘If you must criticize scholars whose work challenges yours, do so on the evidence, not by poisoning the land on which we all live.’ There is a lot of poison in science these days. Dreger is right to demand better.”Library Journal (starred review): “Accomplishing deft journalistic storytelling, [Dreger] pursues relentlessly her thesis that neither truth nor justice can exist without the other and that empirical research is essential to democratic society. She challenges readers to recognize that the loudest voice is not necessarily right, the predominant view is not always correct, and the importance of fact-checking and defending true scholarship. A crusader in the mold of muckrakers from a century ago, Dreger doesn’t try to hide her politics or her agenda. Instead she advocates for change intelligently and passionately.” Kirkus (starred review): “Let us be grateful that there are writers like Dreger who have the wits and the guts to fight for truth.” Dan Savage, founder of “It Gets Better” Project; author of American Savage: “If there ever there were a book that showed how democracy requires smart activism and solid data-and how that kind of work can be defeated by moneyed interests, conservative agendas, inept governments, and duplicitous “activists”-this is it. Galileo’s Middle Finger reads like a thriller. The cliche applies: I literally couldn’t put it down. Alice Dreger leaves you wondering what’s going to happen to America if our universities continue to turn into corporate brands afraid of daring research and unpopular ideas about who we
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