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Brian J. Ford

Auteur van German Secret Weapons

36+ Werken 479 Leden 3 Besprekingen

Over de Auteur

Brian J. Ford is Chairman of the History Network at the Institute of Biology, a Fellow of Cardiff University and a Fellow at the Open University Business School

Bevat de namen: Ford Brian J, brian j. ford

Bevat ook: Brian Ford (1)

Werken van Brian J. Ford

German Secret Weapons (1969) 167 exemplaren
Genes: The Fight for Life (1999) 11 exemplaren
Sensitive Souls (1999) 7 exemplaren
The Human Body (1990) 5 exemplaren
Nonscience Returns (2020) 3 exemplaren

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A fascinating look at many ingenious and in some cases hare brained inventions that have been used to gain advantage in warfare. The book focusses predominately on secret inventions during world war II which I think is the main flaw of this book.
 
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joeteo1 | Dec 18, 2014 |
This book is all about well, what the subtitle says- how animals and plants use their senses to perceive the world and respond to it. Ford's main argument seems to be that we, as humans, have no right to feel superior to the rest of life on earth because most of them have been around far longer than us, and are just as capable of seeing and feeling things, of making decisions about how to act. First he describes in detail our own sense of sight, touch, smell, taste and hearing- and then points out how many animals have much superior senses, or possess ones we lack completely- like bats' and dolphins' ability to echolocate, or birds' ability to navigate using magnetism. Even tiny creatures like insects can see far better than us- have you ever tried to swat a fly? it sees you coming far faster than you can act. All of this was intriguing, but the part of the book that really floored me was where Ford talked about how plants perceive the world. Most of them can sense light, can tell direction (gravity), can respond to temperature changes and wind, and touch. At one point he says that plants sense each other's presence and space themselves out to even out the resources; that's why trees are well-spaced in a forest. I didn't quite get this point, though; he never really explained how that worked out. I always thought trees were well-spaced because when too close together the weaker one would simply fail to thrive.... The final chapters are about microscopic creatures and how they sense the world around them. Not only do they react to their environment and seek out food, but some apparently communicate with each other as well- insofar as they need to, in order to find mates and such. Did you know there's even a microbe that has a functional eye? Crazy stuff, that makes you really wonder at the world around you. The Secret Language of Life is really a fascinating book.

from the Dogear Diary
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
jeane | Sep 3, 2011 |
A contribution to the debate on how our food is produced, how it affects our health, how its production affects our world, and the changes in food and culture that mean we should revisit our ideas on this subject.
 
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herschelian | Jan 18, 2006 |

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Statistieken

Werken
36
Ook door
1
Leden
479
Populariteit
#51,492
Waardering
½ 3.4
Besprekingen
3
ISBNs
62
Talen
7

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