cover image Einstein, History, and Other Passions: The Rebellion Against Science at the End of the Twentieth Century, Revised Edition

Einstein, History, and Other Passions: The Rebellion Against Science at the End of the Twentieth Century, Revised Edition

Gerald Holton. Basic Books, $14 (256pp) ISBN 978-0-201-40716-7

Science has taken quite a beating in the last few years. Held responsible for everything from environmental destruction to moral decline, science and technology have fallen a long way from the exalted position they held in the earlier part of this century. Holton, a professor of physics and the history of science at Harvard, makes a strong argument in defense of science. Rejecting the ""popular, hostile caricatures"" of science as a logical, soulless, incomprehensible wasteland, Holton argues that science can't be adequately understood apart from the greater society and that the dichotomy between the arts and science is a false one. He presents Albert Einstein as a creative, life-affirming person, who was passionate about ideas and understanding life's mysteries. Einstein devoted his life to examining ""conventional wisdom"" and overturning it when it didn't account for the facts. Holton's Einstein is dynamic and personable, but, unfortunately, the same can't be said about every moment in this book. Holton reiterates several times that the field of science is not restricted to techno-wonks, but some readers are likely to be disheartened plugging through sentences like the following: ""Purely as a mnemonic device, let me represent the event E under study as a point in a plane, within orthogonal coordinates, the horizontal of which indicates time."" Still, those with a background in science or the sneaking suspicion that recent science-bashing is unfair, will find this book to be an intelligent defense of a great field of human endeavor. (June)