UNWEAVING - traducción al árabe
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UNWEAVING - traducción al árabe

BOOK BY RICHARD DAWKINS
Unweaving the rainbow; PETWHAC; Petwhac; Unweaving the Rainbow: Science, Delusion and the Appetite for Wonder

UNWEAVING      

الفعل

نَسَلَ ( النَّسِيجَ إلخ )

Wikipedia

Unweaving the Rainbow

Unweaving the Rainbow: Science, Delusion and the Appetite for Wonder is a 1998 book by the evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins, in which the author discusses the relationship between science and the arts from the perspective of a scientist.

Dawkins addresses the misperception that science and art are at odds. Driven by the responses to his books The Selfish Gene and The Blind Watchmaker wherein readers resented his naturalistic world view, seeing it as depriving life of meaning, Dawkins felt the need to explain that, as a scientist, he saw the world as full of wonders and a source of pleasure. This pleasure was not in spite of, but rather because he does not assume as cause the inexplicable actions of a deity but rather the understandable laws of nature.

His starting point is John Keats's well-known, light-hearted accusation that Isaac Newton destroyed the poetry of the rainbow by 'reducing it to the prismatic colours.' See Keats's poem Lamia and Edgar Allan Poe's To Science. Dawkins's agenda is to show the reader that science does not destroy, but rather discovers poetry in the patterns of nature.

Ejemplos de uso de UNWEAVING
1. John Keats talked of "unweaving the rainbow", suggesting that Newton destroyed the beauty of nature by analysing light with a prism and splitting it into different colours.
2. Likewise, a theist feels awe and reverence for "creation", yet as even the atheist Richard Dawkins has described in his Unweaving the Rainbow, almost identical emotional responses to the natural world can be shared by materialist scientists.
3. Among many other indispensable "classics", I would propose EO Wilson‘s The Diversity of Life on the ecological wonders of the Amazon rain forest, and on the teeming micro–organisms in a handful of soil; David Deutsch‘s masterly account of the Many Worlds theory in The Fabric of Reality; Jared Diamond‘s melding of history with biological thought in Guns, Germs and Steel; Antonio Damasio‘s hypnotic account of the neuroscience of the emotions in The Feeling of What Happens; Matt Ridley, unweaving the opposition of nature and nurture in Nature via Nurture; and recently, the philosopher Daniel Dennett, conscious of Hume as well as Dawkins, laying out for us the memetics of faith in Breaking the Spell An important part of Richard Dawkins‘ writing and public speaking has been devoted to religion – he has refused to gloss over the innate contradictions between reason and faith.