Of the manifold fields of human endeavour, science has the distinction of yielding the highest number of revelations per capita. Pick up any journal or popular science magazine, and you will be guaranteed to come across a number of findings that make you marvel at human ingenuity [or despair at our collective idiocy, as the case may be].
Many of us have a particular discovery, theory or experiment that encapsulates these feelings, be it the stark beauty of Darwin's theory of natural selection, the birth of modern synthesis or the gracefully roundabout way in which subatomic particles were discovered.
Personally, I think John Maynard-Smith's application of game theory to ecological relationships to create the idea of evolutionarily stable strategies is pretty darn awesome, even if the mathematics often goes over my head.
I also love Daisyworld, a computer model that demonstrates how a biosphere's albedo can affect the temperature of planet, and how this fits into the Gaian model of a homoeostatic planet.
So..um. Tell us about what you like and stuff.
Many of us have a particular discovery, theory or experiment that encapsulates these feelings, be it the stark beauty of Darwin's theory of natural selection, the birth of modern synthesis or the gracefully roundabout way in which subatomic particles were discovered.
Personally, I think John Maynard-Smith's application of game theory to ecological relationships to create the idea of evolutionarily stable strategies is pretty darn awesome, even if the mathematics often goes over my head.
I also love Daisyworld, a computer model that demonstrates how a biosphere's albedo can affect the temperature of planet, and how this fits into the Gaian model of a homoeostatic planet.
So..um. Tell us about what you like and stuff.