Books

Books : reviews

[cover]

Philip Ball. The Self-Made Tapestry: pattern formation in nature. OUP. 1998

Rating: 2
[ unmissable | great stuff | worth reading | passes the time | waste of time | unfinishable ]

reviewed 24 March 2006

This is an excellent book on complexity and patterns in the natural world. Many books on complexity focus on its appearance in biology. Here, whilst biology is covered, the primary focus is on physical and chemical processes, which serves only to deepen the fascination with the topic: how such seeming simple systems can exhibit such deep and subtle complex properties. Each chapter covers a single theme (such as "bubbles") across an incredibly broad spectrum of examples. Themes covered also include waves, fluids, grains, and more. The main value is the linkages established between different themes and processes discussed throughout the book.

An excellent choice for someone who wants to go the next step beyond the popularisations. The treatment is not as technical as a full textbook, but certainly more detailed than a popular account would be, without losing any readability. Recommended.

[cover]

Philip Ball. Critical Mass: how one thing leads to another. Arrow. 2004

 

[cover]

Philip Ball. Shapes. OUP. 2009

 

The Nature's Patterns trilogy is "a complete rewrite and update of" The Self-Made Tapestry

[cover]

Philip Ball. Flow. OUP. 2009

 

[cover]

Philip Ball. Branches. OUP. 2009