Serendipity The Unexpected in Science

Serendipity The Unexpected in Science by Telmo Pievani, published by MIT Press on September 3, 2024, explores the concept of serendipity within the scientific method. This 216-page book delves into how unexpected discoveries often play a crucial role in scientific advancement, drawing parallels between personal experiences of chance and the experiences of scientists. Pievani examines the phenomenon of serendipity, tracing its origins to the mythical Serendip and highlighting its significance in the history of scientific inquiry.
In this edition, readers will find a comprehensive analysis that goes beyond familiar examples like penicillin and X-rays. Pievani introduces a taxonomy of serendipitous discoveries and discusses the conditions that foster such occurrences. He presents a theory of serendipity, emphasizing that these discoveries result from a combination of curiosity, imagination, and fortuitous accidents rather than mere luck. The book invites readers to reflect on the limitations of human knowledge and the intricate relationship between the mind and the world it seeks to understand.
Official synopsis Publisher
From the bestselling author of Imperfection, a theory of uncertainty as the very core of the scientific method—and the essence of its wonder.
How many times have we looked for something and found something else? A partner, a job, an object? The same thing often happens to scientists: they design an experiment and discover the unexpected, which usually turns out to be very important. This fascinating phenomenon is called serendipity, which takes its name from the mythical Serendip, a place from which, according to a Persian fable, three princes set off to explore the world, making chance discoveries along the way. In Serendipity, the award-winning author of Imperfection Telmo Pievani returns to weave a compelling story about the unexpected in science and its fascinating role in our understanding of the world.
Going far beyond the usual examples of penicillin, X-rays, the microwave oven, and Christopher Columbus, Pievani shows that the most surprising stories of serendipity in the history of science reveal profound aspects of the logic of scientific discovery. In this book, he presents for the first time: an archaeology of the idea; a taxonomy of serendipitous discoveries; an “ecology of serendipity” (the surrounding conditions and factors that can promote it); and lastly, a theory of serendipity (why it occurs so frequently in so many sciences). From Zadig to Sherlock Holmes, Pievani shows that such great discoveries are not just the product of luck. Instead, serendipity comes from a mix of cunning, curiosity, sagacity, imagination, and accidents caught on the fly. Serendipity illuminates how much we don’t know and how much we don’t even know we don’t know. Above all, Pievani reminds us that the human brain is of a piece with the world it is investigating—a world so much bigger than our knowledge—and it has also evolved within that world, adapting as it has to.
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