Ignorance
How It Drives Science
Stuart Firestein
Reviews and Awards
"This is a lovely little book, which is truly about what drives science; and its not about physics, or chemistry, or engineering, but real biology." - Jack Cohen, The Biologist
"This is a lovely little book ... Give it to your friends or relatives to explain why you do science." - Professor Jack Cohen FSB, The Biologist
"[B]oth concise and splendidly aphoristic." - Robin Ince, New Statesman
"A valuable acquisition for academic libraries, given the current emphasis on STEM education and undergraduate research." - R. E. Buntrock, CHOICE
"It is important to emphasize the creative process in the sciences. This is not just another methodological book on the empirical cycle, but an unpretentious and smooth-reading plea for attention on an uncultivated but mineable area." - Tijdschrift voor Psychiatrie, Dec 2012
"An excellent read, [it is] a fine companion text for potential scientists a the beginning of their studies ... You may gradually become more and more ignorant as you read, and you will enjoy the journey. Ignorance in this telling is truly bliss." - Moran Cerf, Science Magazine
"a quietly mind-blowing new book." - Readers Digest
"Stuart Firestein, a teacher and neuroscientist, has written a splendid and admirably short book about the pleasure of finding things out using the scientific method. He smartly outlines how science works in reality rather than in stereotype. Ignorance is a thoughtful introduction to the nature of knowing, and the joy of curiosity." - Adam Rutherford, The Observer
"A splendid book ... Packed with real examples and deep practical knowledge, Ignorance is a thoughtful introduction to the nature of knowing, and the joy of curiosity." - Adam Rutherford, The Observer
"The fundamental attribute of successful scientists, Firestein argues in this pithy book, is a form of ignorance characterised by knowing what you don't know, and being able to ask the right questions." - Culture Lab
"The book is effectively conversational and can be read quickly, as intended." - The American Journal of Epidemiology
"In Ignorance: How It Drives Science Stuart Firestein goes so far as to claim that ignorance is the main force driving scientific pursuit. Firestein, a popular professor of neurobiology at Columbia, admits at the outset that he uses "the word ignorance at least in part to be intentionally provocative" and clarifies that for him it denotes a "communal gap in knowledge." He describes clearly how scientists continually uncover new facts that confront them with the extent of their ignorance, and how they successfully grapple with uncertainty in their daily research work... Especially valuable is Firestein's ability to capture how science gets done in fits and starts... He demystifies the day-to-day activities of research scientists across a variety of disciplines with case studies illustrating how breakthroughs in understanding, however humble or grand, are essentially unforeseeable even to a seasoned mind." - New York Review of Books