
Psychology
Jenny Odell
Melville House
THERE is no shortage of books about digital culture and its deleterious effects. The same goes for publications on healing our addicted and distracted minds or that recommend contemplating nature as a mental salve.
How To Do Nothing is different. Author Jenny Odell calls it “an activist book disguised as a self-help book” and explains why “in an environment completely geared toward capitalist appropriation of even our smallest thoughts… doing nothing is hard”.
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The attention economy is well served by technology but isn’t driven by it. As Odell reminds us, around 306 BC, the Greek sage Epicurus set up his philosophical school on the outskirts of Athens to avoid the centre’s opportunism, corruption, machinations and military bravado.
From a couple of millennia later, she quotes Scottish writer Robert Louis Stevenson, who called busyness a “symptom of deficient vitality”, and observed “a sort of dead-alive, hackneyed people about, who are scarcely conscious of living except in the exercise of some conventional occupation”.
What to do? Groups resisting a prevailing cult of urgency quickly become their own little fiefdoms, ruled over by their own little philosopher-kings. Individual acts of resistance, on the other hand, rarely achieve scale. We admire the polite obstructionism of the clerk in Herman Melville’s short story Bartleby, the Scrivener. But the poor devil still ends up dead in jail.
Odell argues that turning our backs on social media to engage with our immediate environment and its plight may offer us a third, more effective line of resistance. Stirring stuff.
Simon Ings
Evolutionary biology
Daniel S. Milo
Harvard University Press
The eyes of giant and colossal squid grow up to 40 centimetres in diameter, the largest in nature. Why? No adaptive advantage has been found for such huge, expensive jellies. And what about the giraffe? “It could be that giraffes evolved long necks to outdo other browsers,” argues philosopher Daniel Milo, “but there is no reason… giraffes should rise two meters , the African elephant.”
Good Enough wonders why evolutionary biologists shun the scientific thinking called the null hypothesis. This states, says Milo, that “every relationship between phenomena is, by default, the fruit of chance”. If you think the squid needs big eyes, or the giraffe a long neck, prove it. If you can’t, then chance is a sufficient explanation. “Most of what survives was not selected but is just not bad enough to be eliminated,” Milo observes.
Some of nature’s wonders might be happy accidents, rather than masterpieces of adaptation. The human brain is one such. For most of our history we have been an endangered species – the only one that gives birth two months later than we physically should, to infants that are “neurologically half-cooked”. The intellectual gifts our brains provided were barely enough to drag us, 70,000 years ago, through a population bottleneck that may have seen human numbers fall to 10,000.
“Most of what survives was not selected but is just not bad enough to be eliminated”
Today, coddled in a warm bath of culture, our brains are no longer useful, says Milo: they just are. “The skills our ancestors cultivated for the purpose of survival no longer serve that purpose,” he writes, from the perspective of 21st-century plenty, “yet the skills remain.” The “anti-boredom project” we call culture, thrives not because it is selected for through struggle, “but because there is no struggle”.
It is a charming argument, suited to lazy, sunny afternoons: “Why should we struggle and strain when we are all good enough?”
Simon Ings
Graphic novel
Andrea Wulf and Lillian Melcher
Pantheon Books
Alexander von Humboldt was one of the greatest scientists of all time, a polymath and explorer who paved the way for Darwin and foresaw climate change and environmental destruction more than 200 years ago. Andrea Wulf won an award for her biography of him; now she has teamed up with artist Lillian Melcher to create a wonderful, rich graphic novel of Humboldt’s incredible life.
“I fear that one day man will travel to distant planets,” wrote Humboldt. “And then he’ll take his lethal mixture of vice, greed, violence and ignorance to those planets too – turning them barren and ravaged as we are already doing with Earth.” Humboldt saw nature as a living whole, a “wonderful web of organic life”, describing it without resorting to God. After Wulf’s mission to elevate Humboldt to his rightful place, this beautiful book should bring him to a new audience.
Rowan Hooper
Medicine
Monty Lyman
Bantam Press
“When you look closely at the back of your hand, it is as if you are in a passenger aircraft peering down at the world from 30,00 feet,” writes dermatologist Monty Lyman in one of the few books to tackle skin, our largest, most visible organ. And somehow you know exactly what he means.
Liz Else
Science thriller
Susan Hurley
Affirm Press
An Australian science thriller that centres on an immigrant doctor and a clinical trial that goes horribly wrong. This has its origins in the real-life horror story of the 2006 UK clinical trial of autoimmune drug TGN1412.
Donna Lu
Synthetic biology
Susan Hockfield
W W Norton
Want to learn how to build a better battery with viruses? How plants are being re-engineered to produce more food? Or how computers will interface with our brains? Your amazing guide to the future of biology is the former president of the Aladdin’s cave that is the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Rowan Hooper
Climate science
Vivien Gornitz
Columbia University Press
The world is melting. We are on a terrifying path towards the eventual loss of the cryosphere, that part of our world made of ice and snow. Geologist Vivien Gornitz describes all aspects of the science of the thawing world, and of the ecological, climatic, social and economic consequences. Read it, and act before it is too late.
Rowan Hooper
Sci-fi
Sue Burke
Macmillan
Catch up with the first of two connected novels before the next, Interference, in late autumn. Imagine Kim Stanley Robinson’sMars Trilogy – but with sentient alien plants. Gripping and strong on biology and consciousness.
Ruby Prosser Scully
Puzzles: Code and ciphers
Brian Clegg
Icon Books
Just the thing for a very, very long train journey: a book of fiendish cryptic puzzles and ciphers. Start with Caeser’s novel and end with Enigma variation. Good luck!
Liz Else
Podcast
Gimlet Media
The Science Vs team aims to put us right by sorting out what is fact, what isn’t and what is in-between for faddish topics. Hosted by Wendy Zuckerman, the team tackles DNA kits, alcohol and fasting diets. Great fun, offering episode transcripts often featuring more than 100 citations.