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Chapter one
The Way We Are
The Data That Threatened to Break Physics
What does a rational scientist do with an impossible result?
The Admiral of the String Theory Wars
After a decade, Peter Woit still thinks string theory is a gory mess.
The Family That Couldn’t Say Hippopotamus
The origins of language are not what inherited disorders seemed to suggest.
In Mathematics, Mistakes Aren’t What They Used To Be
Computers can’t invent, but they’re changing the field anyway.
Chapter two
Common Wisdom
The Sinkhole Hunters
In sprawling Florida, one group of geologists is never short on business.
The Trouble With Scientists
How one psychologist is tackling human biases in science.
Our Neanderthal Complex
What if our ancient relatives did “human” better?
Top 10 Design Flaws in the Human Body
From our knees to our eyeballs, our bodies are full of hack solutions.
How to Unlearn a Disease
Medicine’s latest cure is forgetting you’re sick.
Chapter three
Take It Back
How the Biggest Fabricator in Science Got Caught
Yoshitaka Fujii falsified 183 papers before statistics exposed him.
Why We Should Let the Pantheon Crack
Modern architects have a lot to learn from the sound engineering of the ancients.
The Caveman’s Home Was Not a Cave
Our picture of man’s early home has been skewed by modern preconceptions.
How Necking Shaped the Giraffe
The private life of the African giant offers a remarkable view on evolution.
Chapter four
What You Want to See
Consciousness Began When the Gods Stopped Speaking
How Julian Jaynes’ famous 1970s theory is faring in the neuroscience age.
Infected Monkeys and Other Cautionary Tales From the Biolab
No matter how safe the lab is, humans working with deadly bioagents can make errors.
Ingenious: John Ochsendorf
Meet the architectural rebel who champions ancient engineers.
Your Brain Can’t Handle the Moon
How the moon stirs tension between your conscious and subconscious minds.
How Math’s Most Famous Proof Nearly Broke
Andrew Wiles thought he had a solution to an age-old puzzle. Until it began to unravel.
Related Facts So Romantic
“Reality provides us with facts so romantic that imagination itself could add nothing to them.” —Jules Verne
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