Grayling porta un ordine soddisfacente a temi scoraggianti' Steven Pinker In tempi molto recenti l'umanità ha imparato molto sull'universo, sul passato e su se stessa. Ma attraverso i nostri notevoli successi nell'acquisizione di conoscenze abbiamo imparato quanto dobbiamo ancora imparare: la scienza che abbiamo, ad esempio, affronta solo il 5 stelle percento dell'universo; la preistoria è ancora in fase di rivelazione, con migliaia di siti storici ancora da esplorare; e le nuove neuroscienze della mente e del cervello sono appena agli inizi. Cosa sappiamo e come lo sappiamo? Cosa sappiamo ora che non sappiamo? E cosa abbiamo imparato sugli ostacoli alla conoscenza di più? In un'epoca di battaglie sempre più profonde su cosa significhino conoscenza e verità, queste domande sono più importanti che mai. Il filosofo e matematico di successo AC Grayling cerca di rispondere in tre aree cruciali alle frontiere della conoscenza: scienza, storia e psicologia. Una straordinaria storia della scienza, della vita sulla terra e della mente umana stessa, un tour de force avvincente e affascinante, scritto con verve, chiarezza e una notevole ampiezza di conoscenze. 'Straordinario, leggibile e autorevole. Come abbia padroneggiato così tanto, così a fondo, è a dir poco sorprendente' Lawrence M. Krauss, autore di A Universe from Nothing 'Questo libro risuona dell'eccitazione del grande progetto umano di scoperta' Adam Zeman, autore di Aphantasia.
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Professor A. C. Grayling is Principal of the New College of the Humanities at Northeastern University, London, and a Supernumerary Fellow of St Anne's College, Oxford. He has written and edited over thirty books on philosophy, history, science and current affairs. For several years he wrote columns for the Guardian newspaper and The Times and was the chairman of the 2014 Man Booker Prize.
In very recent times humanity has learnt a vast amount about the universe, the past, and itself. But through our remarkable successes in acquiring knowledge we have learned how much we have yet to learn: the science we have, for example, addresses just 5 per cent of the universe; pre-history is still being revealed, with thousands of historical sites yet to be explored; and the new neurosciences of mind and brain are just beginning.
What do we know, and how do we know it? What do we now know that we don't know? And what have we learnt about the obstacles to knowing more? In a time of deepening battles over what knowledge and truth mean, these questions matter more than ever. Bestselling polymath and philosopher A. C. Grayling seeks to answer them in three crucial areas at the frontiers of knowledge: science, history and psychology. A remarkable history of science, life on earth, and the human mind itself, this is a compelling and fascinating tour de force, written with verve, clarity and remarkable breadth of knowledge.
History tells us that these kinds of ‘knowledge what’ explanations consisted principally in what we now call ‘religious’ beliefs. These in turn contributed further kinds of supposed ‘knowledge how’ by suggesting forms of interaction with aspects of nature, or the agencies that control nature, hoping to influence or propitiate them through ritual, prayer, and sacrifice. It is an interesting speculation that, as liturgical (religious, ritualistic) means of influencing nature came to be displaced by more practical and mundane expertise, so the interest in effecting control transferred itself from nature to society; perhaps, as suggested by the concept of ‘taboo’, when controlling certain kinds of behaviour was no longer regarded as necessary for influencing nature or nature’s gods, the social control – in the form of conceptions of ‘morality’ – endured. Whether or not this is the case, the main point remains that until very recently in human history ‘knowledge how’ has been far in advance of ‘knowledge what’, and the effort to provide the latter has until very recently rested chiefly on imagination, fancy, fear, and wishful thinking.
As suggested by reference to Thales above, the story of humankind’s efforts to ‘know what’ in addition to ‘how’, but without relying on imagination and traditional beliefs, first comes fully into view with the philosophers of Greek classical antiquity from the sixth century bce onwards. Thales, who flourished around 585 bce in Ionia on the east coast of the Aegean, is often cited as ‘the first philosopher’, because he is the first person known to have asked and answered a question about the nature and source of reality without recourse to myth. In desiring a more intellectually plausible account than was offered by mythographers and poets, he sought to identify the cosmos’s arche (‘principle’), defined by Aristotle as ‘that of which all existing things are composed ... the element and principle of the things that are’, by working it out from what he saw around him. His choice of candidate for the arche was: water. His thinking can be reconstructed as follows. Water is everywhere, and it is essential. It is in the sea, it falls from the sky, it runs in your veins, plants contain it, all living things die without it. Water can even be said to produce earth itself; look at the vast quantities of soil disgorged by the Nile in its annual floods. And as the clincher: water is the only substance Thales knew that can occupy all three material states of solid (when frozen), liquid (the basic state), and gas (when boiling away as steam). So, it is ubiquitous, essential, productive, and metamorphic; it is the only thing he knew to be so; it must therefore be the substance from which all other things come and on which they depend: the arche of the universe.
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