|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull of surprising anecdotes, curious facts and historical oddities, this remarkable little book connects observations from our everyday lives to the scientific principles that explain them. You will find information on organic produce, irradiated foods, trans fat and fat substitutes, natural herbs, designer drugs, smallpox, Mad Cow Disease, Prions, Anthrax, cancer, DNA testing, global warming, acid rain, aphrodisiacs, pheromones, and much more. Chances are if there is something you were wondering about, you will find it covered here. Should you be eating margarine? Are cell phones safe? Read on! The author has avoided scientific jargon and mathematics to make this book of interest to nonscientists and scientists alike. Full Product DetailsAuthor: James P. CollmanPublisher: University Science Books,U.S. Imprint: University Science Books,U.S. Dimensions: Width: 16.50cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 24.10cm Weight: 0.635kg ISBN: 9781891389092ISBN 10: 1891389092 Pages: 280 Publication Date: 21 September 2001 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPreface Overture – Is Anything Safe? Chapter 1: Chemicals Lurking in Your Grocery Store Chapter 2: The Pharmacy Chapter 3: Is ""Health Food Store"" An Oxymoron? Chapter 4: Infectious Agents: Are Microorganisms All Bad? Chapter 5: Cancer and the Environment Chapter 6: Nature is Elemental Chapter 7: Natural and Unnatural Molecules in the Environment Chapter 8: Is the Sky Falling? Chapter 9: Dust, Magnets, and Scuba Diving Chapter 10: We Are All Radioactive! Finale – There Is No Free Lunch! Further Reading Glossary IndexReviewsAiming to improve readers' scientific literacy, Naturally Dangerous examines the risks involved in the choices we make about what we eat, how we treat our illnesses and how much time we spend out in the sun. From electric blankets to monosodium glutamate to genetically engineered foods, Collman steers a reasoned, sensible course through the potentially hazardous straits of everyday life...if you treat Collman's book as a sampler of solid advice, you won't finish it feeling hungry. --The Washington Post This is one of the most valuable books on public health policy - not merely on environmental policy - to have been written for the intelligent general reader in recent years. Its author is James P. Collman, the George A. and Hilda M. Daubert Professor of Chemistry at Stanford. His target is scientific illiteracy and its effects on public opinion about what is hazardous; overblown health scares reported daily by the news media; and futile government efforts to craft consumer protection policies. --The Stanford Report ""Aiming to improve readers’ scientific literacy, Naturally Dangerous examines the risks involved in the choices we make about what we eat, how we treat our illnesses and how much time we spend out in the sun. From electric blankets to monosodium glutamate to genetically engineered foods, Collman steers a reasoned, sensible course through the potentially hazardous straits of everyday life…if you treat Collman’s book as a sampler of solid advice, you won’t finish it feeling hungry."" --The Washington Post ""Collman’s scientific acumen is evident throughout this book. Only an excellent communicator with a profound understanding of a subject can provide such clear and simple explanations of facts, making them totally accessible to nonscientists and at the same time satisfying to chemists. In this slim and engaging volume, Collman broaches in a lucid, no-nonsense style exactly what the title proffers…This is no doom-and-gloom treatise. It’s an adult, scholarly look at the risks involved with the choices we make."" --Chemical and Engineering News ""…makes an effective case for not accepting the simple equation ‘natural = safe.’ In addition to food, [Collman] covers herbal medicines, environmental pollution, global warming, electromagnetic radiation and radioactivity."" --Nature ""More books like this need to be written — and read…If you think the sky is falling, that cancer is imminent, and that all things natural or ‘organic’ are wonderful, open this book and surprise yourself with the facts."" --Choice ""Professor James Collman of Stanford University has provided an excellent resource for all of us who try to help our students and the general public to discriminate between valid science and the bogus scientific claims that pervade television, the Internet, the grocery store, and especially the health food store."" --Hal Harris, Hal’s Pick of the Month, Journal of Chemical Education ""This is one of the most valuable books on public health policy – not merely on environmental policy – to have been written for the intelligent general reader in recent years. Its author is James P. Collman, the George A. and Hilda M. Daubert Professor of Chemistry at Stanford. His target is scientific illiteracy and its effects on public opinion about what is hazardous; overblown health scares reported daily by the news media; and futile government efforts to craft consumer protection policies."" --The Stanford Report Author InformationJ.P. COLLMAN is at Stanford University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
||||