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In 2010, an outbreak of whooping cough in California infected more than 8,000 people, resulting in the hospitalization of more than 800 people and the death of 10 infants. In 2015, an outbreak of the measles in Disneyland infected more than 125 people. Both the whooping cough and the measles are vaccine-preventable diseases (VPDs) that have been largely nonexistent in the United States for decades. As these cases demonstrate, individuals who prioritize...
Description
"In his 1969 book The Making of a Counterculture, Theodore Roszak described the youth of the time as fleeing science "as if from a place inhabited by plague" and even seeking "subversion of the scientific worldview" itself. Roszak's view has persisted: the counterculture is popularly regarded as a movement that was explicitly antiscientific in its embrace of alternative spiritualities and communal living. Such a view is too simple, ignoring the diverse...
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"In a time of dazzling scientific progress, how are we to separate genuine breakthroughs from the noisy gaggle of false claims? Touching on everything from Deepak Chopra's "quantum alternative to growing old" and "free energy" machines to unwarranted hype surrounding the International Space Station, Robert L. Park leads us through the dim back alleys of fringe science, down the gleaming corridors of Washington power, and even into our evolutionary...
Author
Description
During a lifetime, of activism - including three decades as the president of the Federation of American Scientists - Jeremy J. Stone has worked on a broad range of issues from nuclear war, disarmament and ethnic conflict to human rights and good government. In this memoir, carefully documented - and decorated with special ornaments showing key turning points - he describes two dozen of his most fascinating adventures and dares to try to determine...
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Description
"Drawing extensively from archival sources and in-depth interviews, Kelly Moore examines the features of American science that made it an attractive target for protesters in the early cold war and Vietnam eras, including scientists' work in military research and activities perceived as environmentally harmful. She describes the intellectual traditions that protesters drew from - liberalism, moral individualism, and the New Left - and traces the rise...
Author
Description
"From stories of gruesome self-experimentation to descriptions of exhausting theoretical calculations, examples abound of scientists willingly surrendering their personal well-being for the sake of their work. What accounts for the prevalence of this coupling of knowledge and pain - for the peculiar assumption that science requires suffering?"
"In this lucid and absorbing history, Rebecca M. Herzig examines the rise of an ethic of "self-sacrifice"...
Author
Description
This book explores changing American views of race mixing in the twentieth century, showing how new scientific ideas transformed accepted notions of race and how those ideas played out on college campuses in the 1960s. In the 1930s, it was not unusual for medical experts to caution against miscegenation, or race mixing, espousing the common opinion that it would produce biologically dysfunctional offspring. By the 1960s the scientific community roundly...
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