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Dinosaur in a Haystack
- Reflections in Natural History
- Narrated by: Meredith MacRae, Efrem Zimbalist Jr.
- Length: 18 hrs and 20 mins
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Publisher's summary
Award-winning, best-selling author, evolutionary biologist, and paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould takes the art of the essay to an unprecedented height of excellence in this vibrant collection of writings on science and natural history. From fads to fungus, baseball to beeswax, Gould always circles back to the great themes of time, change, and history, carrying listeners home to the centering theme of evolution. These unabridged selections were originally published in Natural History magazine. In April 2000, the US Library of Congress named Gould a "Living Legend". He died of cancer two years later at the age of 60. In 2008 he was posthumously awarded the Darwin-Wallace Medal along with 12 other recipients. Until 2008 this medal had been awarded only every 50 years by the Linnean Society of London.
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Athena Aktipis of Arizona State University is a self-professed apocalypse enthusiast, and as the host of the podcast Zombified, she knows the undead inside and out. With Zombified: Real-World Lessons from Fictional Apocalypses, she’s compiled her research and insights into a fascinating Audible Original that will have you thinking deeper about all those shambling, brain-hungry corpses in pop culture—not to mention our everyday lives. Drawing on years of research on zombies and zombification, these six lessons offer a fun way to explore and understand the many forces that influence us.
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Good attempt, lackluster execution
- By R. MCRACKAN on 10-14-23
By: Athena Aktipis, and others
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Bernoulli's Fallacy
- Statistical Illogic and the Crisis of Modern Science
- By: Aubrey Clayton
- Narrated by: Tim H. Dixon
- Length: 15 hrs and 14 mins
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Aubrey Clayton traces the history of how statistics went astray, beginning with the groundbreaking work of the 17th-century mathematician Jacob Bernoulli and winding through gambling, astronomy, and genetics. Clayton recounts the feuds among rival schools of statistics, exploring the surprisingly human problems that gave rise to the discipline and the all-too-human shortcomings that derailed it.
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Rigorously Bayesian
- By Anonymous User on 01-25-22
By: Aubrey Clayton
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Hen's Teeth and Horse's Toes
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Over a century after Darwin published the Origin of Species, Darwinian theory is in a "vibrantly healthy state," writes Stephen Jay Gould, its most engaging and illuminating exponent. Exploring the "peculiar and mysterious particulars of nature," Gould introduces the listener to some of the many and wonderful manifestations of evolutionary biology.
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Full House
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We have always identified trends as bad (loosening of the moral fiber) or good (better ethnic eating in urban areas). But Stephen Jay Gould argues that this mode of interpretation is a bias that needs correcting. In Full House, Gould presents the truth about progress, evolution, and excellence, as well as a different way to understand trends other than as entities moving in a definite direction.
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One of my favoritess
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The fascinating group of animals called dinosaurs became extinct some 65 million years ago (except for their feathered descendants). In their place evolved an enormous variety of land creatures, especially mammals, which in their way were every bit as remarkable as their Mesozoic cousins. The Age of Mammals, the Cenozoic Era, has never had its Jurassic Park, but it was an amazing time in earth's history, populated by a wonderful assortment of bizarre animals. The rapid evolution of thousands of species of mammals brought forth many incredible creatures—including our own ancestors.
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Mammals are immersed in minutia.
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For more than twenty-five years, paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould wrote a column called “The View of Life” for Natural History magazine. More than thirty entries from that column comprise this collection, which covers topics from dinosaurs to baseball and nearly everything in between related to natural history and evolution.
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Leonardo's Mountain of Clams and the Diet of Worm
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In this essay collection, Stephen Jay Gould examines the puzzles and paradoxes great and small that build nature's and humanity's diversity and order. He formulates a humanistic natural history, one that considers how humans have learned to study and understand nature, rather than a history of nature itself.
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Thoughtful and entertaining
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What listeners say about Dinosaur in a Haystack
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- Mahmood K. Mokhayesh
- 01-16-23
Boring
This was hard to listen to. I hated the fact that there where two different narrators. it seemed disjointed, sounded like the ramblings of an old man.
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- Lee
- 02-11-19
Well written, engaging thoughts
Even before I took in the dual major of Biology and English, I couldn’t understand why so many took issue with Gould’s supposed wordiness. The way Gould writes, in this case in essay form, makes his thoughts accessible to the average reader and can help to convey scientific ideas to those not versed in them.
Then again, the same community that bemoans Gould’s “wordiness” is probably that which bemoaned Sagan bringing science to the people.
As I stated, Gould writes these essays so anyone can read and understand and, hopefully, have their curiosity piqued, thereby engendering more study. That’s really what a science book or essay should do should do regardless the subject.
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7 people found this helpful
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- Jose
- 11-14-17
This is trivial pursuit training
The audio stinks, it's like listening to a damaged CD inside a tunnel.
The essay's were probably interesting in the 1990's and probably prepared many people for Trivia contests, but that's not why I read books.
Worse than being scattered, the essays are boring and generally pure-opinion.
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6 people found this helpful