A compelling journey through science’s big breakthroughs, by an award-winning Australian science writer
Humans developed the scientific method over centuries. Its departure from what came before was that theories should be fuelled by data, not opinion. Today, the institutions that underpin democracy – the law, academia, government, journalism – all rely on its central idea: seeking facts and interrogating them through robust discussion and real-world testing. Yet in the post-truth era, public conversations can feel far from scientific.
In Proof, Elizabeth Finkel describes how the scientific method plays out in a series of controversies, from proving the existence of Einstein’s gravitational waves to identifying the origins of Covid-19, from understanding human origins to defining consciousness. Through these tales of dispute and discovery, she breaks down the key elements of scientific thinking.
Full of politics, prejudice, obsession, heroism and eccentricity, Proof captures the drama and excitement of scientific discovery and debate and argues compellingly that its lessons are more crucial now than ever.
Over de auteur
Elizabeth Finkel holds a Ph D in biochemistry and spent ten years as a research scientist before becoming an award-winning journalist and author of The Genome Generation, among other books. She is a founding editor of Cosmos magazine and a regular contributor to the US magazine Science, Radio National’s Science Show and The Monthly. Her awards include a Queensland Premier’s Literary Award for Stem Cells: Controversy at the Frontiers of Science, the National Press Club’s award for Higher Education Journalist of the Year and the Eureka Award for Science Journalism. Her forthcoming book is Proof: Science Lessons for the Post-Truth Era.