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Reviews for Bioprocessing and Biotreatment of Coal

 Bioprocessing and Biotreatment of Coal magazine reviews

The average rating for Bioprocessing and Biotreatment of Coal based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2016-11-12 00:00:00
1990was given a rating of 3 stars Cheryl Nelson
This is needed information for anyone wanting to thoughtfully comment on energy independence, energy-related politics or today's price of gasoline. The author seems quite balanced in his assessments of presidents and others of different political parties. The book focuses on energy policy and includes none of the usually punditry when delving into politics.
Review # 2 was written on 2016-10-13 00:00:00
1990was given a rating of 3 stars Laura Delarato
Essentially, Consuming Power examines the way American choices regarding technology -- specifically, which technologies to use, and in which ways -- shape society. It's short for the timespan it covers, but dense; the word muscular comes to mind. Nye wastes no words: : every sentence carries with it the meat of facts or analysis. He has grievances with those who believe certain technologies always have particular effects on society, like the introduction of the automobile leading to a society whose transportation infrastructure is wholly oriented toward cars. Human choices created the highways and subsidies cars thrive in, and human choices eroded the rail networks that once tied the nation together. The choices we make regarding which technologies to invest in dictate our future actions, however: the United States will be hard-pressed to move away from an automobile-oriented system if even it badly wants, and needs to. Other nations -- which made different choices regarding the automobile -- have more options. While this argument has its merits, I think Nye overestimates the role of human choice. We seem to be a species dedicating to following the path of least resistance: if a technology allows us to do a thing, and it occurs to us to do it, we'll happily do it without sitting down and thinking terribly long about the consequences. Geography and history had more to do with Europe's different approach to cars than human choice: Europeans couldn't sprawl around sloppily because they don't have an entire continent of land to waste. At the same time, this criticism reinforces Nye's other argument, that choices dictate future choices. Once arrangements have been made for one system, it's difficult to adopt to another. Europe would find it difficult to impose suburban sprawl on itself. While Nye doesn't have an obvious agenda, he's plainly not impressed with the way Americans have so limited themselves and their future energy options. The course of our energy history, it seems, is have put more eggs into fewer baskets. Consuming Power is a strong read for those interested in American economy, industry, and energy.


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