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Reviews for Hands-On Science Levelthree

 Hands-On Science Levelthree magazine reviews

The average rating for Hands-On Science Levelthree based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2011-05-26 00:00:00
2000was given a rating of 4 stars Anthony Scott
I extremely recommmend this book which gives a much needed perspective on science in this age of scientific secularism; Dr. Schroeder is in a unique position to give this perspective because he is an accomplished physicist as well as an individual who believes in God in the religion of Judaism. As a muslim myself, I agree with many of his views on science especially his emphasis on the notion that this magnificent wonder-full world was not conceived spontaneously without meticulous wisdom and infinite complexity of which a great deal is still unknown. He ventures through physics, cell composition and function, childbirth, the brain, and the mind among other topics to explore this universe we take so much for granted. For instance, did we know that in protein synthesis, proteins are used to make proteins? or that science still can't explain how we can see a picture in our mind? or that our body makes 2,000 proteins a second!?, how then can we accept that we were formed by some pattern of hit-and-miss mutations? this book challenges you to think and explore YOU, in a verse in the Qur'an "And in yourselves, Can you not see?" (51:21). Can we not see how much wisdom is expended in our being, which is being perpetuated every day? and in the whole ecological biosphere? The book is really eye-opening as you discover many intricate details untalked about in the science classroom or not really discussed. This book illustrates proof of an Intelligent Creator who has inexhaustibly created a complex universe which we can only begin to perceive to this day.
Review # 2 was written on 2007-05-27 00:00:00
2000was given a rating of 2 stars Tyler Phillips
According to Gerald L. Schroeder, “The renowned former president of the American Physical Society and professor of physics at Princeton University, recipient of the Einstein Award and member of the National Academy of Sciences, John Archibald Wheeler, likened what underlies all existence to an idea, the ‘bit’ (the binary digit) of information that gives rise to the ‘it,’ the substance of matter. If we can discover that underlying idea, we will have ascertained not only the basis for the unity that underlies all existence, but most important, the source of that unity. We will have encountered the hidden face of God.” (8-9) Schroeder later states, “Wisdom, information, an idea, is the link between the metaphysical Creator and the physical creation. It is the hidden face of God.” (49) At the end of his exploration, Schroeder leaves the reader with, “Even in the closest of encounters, the face of God remains hidden.” (187) Does that mean his entire book is not worth reading? Perhaps, the “face of god” is the thirst for knowledge and understanding and creating conscious personal electric connections and signals within our own brains, or something like that. Information is like, wicked important dude. “Call it wisdom or an idea, information. The Hebrew word integrating all these would be emet, reality.” (38) Schroeder later defines wisdom as, “the building block, the substrate, from which all the time and space and matter of the universe were created. Wisdom is the interface between the physics of the world and the metaphysics of creation.” (93) My late professor, Dr. Elie Wiesel (also a Jew), defined wisdom as, “the soul of knowledge” in our class, “Memories, Madness, and Desire” in 2008. Schroeder was living in Jerusalem with his wife and five children at the time of this publication (2001), but laments, “I personally do not think that the complexity of life proves the existence of the Divine.” (93) later adding, “Faith backed by knowledge is much stronger than faith based on an emotionally driven gossamer hope, whether that faith be secular or religious.” (93-94) I believe in Bill Belichick, Tom Brady, and the Patriot Way. Is there a face morph image of Bill and Tom? There’s tons of empirical evidence to back it all up too! The TB12 Method may or may not be pseudoscience, but Schroeder argues, “The wisdom of biology doesn’t try to beat the rules of nature. It outsmarts them.” (102) Maybe people from New England are wicked smaht too? “We’re not used to icy sidewalks in Jerusalem.” (175) Native Massholes certainly are. There are three distinct personal connections I made to Wallacean (is that even word?) literature during The Hidden Face of God. 1. Chapter 7 opens describing the brain as an antenna: “If the universe is indeed the expression of an idea, the brain may be the sole antenna with circuitry turned to pick up the signal of that idea.” (105) Schroeder earned his Ph.D. at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In DFW’s opus, Infinite Jest, the MIT radio station is shaped like a brain. 2. Discussing female and male brain differences as demonstrated through standardized testing, Schroeder summarizes, “In standardized tests of skills, women in general do better at matching items having common characteristics. Men excel at rotating three-dimensional objects.” (144) Yang in Saint Dave’s Brief Interviews With Hideous Men tells Ndiawar, “Look, man. I rotate three-dimensional objects. Mentally.” 3. Is non-fiction more of your forte’? Perhaps consider this one: “Neural cells getting information from the white lines alone are inhibited from only two sides. Nothing other than surgery, which I am not suggesting, will remove the effect. It’s built from birth. Lobsters have the same problem!” (163) 4. Bonus points: A. “And the brain is the top-of-the-line example of this successful struggle against oblivion.” (133) B. “Destroy the cortex and you destroy consciousness. Destroy the brain and the palpable mind goes with it into oblivion.” (152) !!!*“Is a joke truly funny when we laugh at it, or is it merely some aberration of our frontal lobe?” (143)*!!! If I could date anyone, I’d date Gravity because, “Gravity is always attractive.” (32-33) “In other words don’t expect to philosophize in the morning if you orgy in the evening.” (161) I rate this book four stars.


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