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Your Atomic Self: The Invisible Elements That Connect You to Everything Else in the Universe

Tekijä: Curt Stager

JäseniäKirja-arvostelujaSuosituimmuussijaKeskimääräinen arvioKeskustelut
433586,643 (4.33)-
What do atoms have to do with your life? In Your Atomic Self , scientist Curt Stager reveals how they connect you to some of the most amazing things in the universe. You will follow your oxygen atoms through fire and water and from forests to your fingernails. Hydrogen atoms will wriggle into your hair and betray where you live and what you have been drinking. The carbon in your breath will become tree trunks, and the sodium in your tears will link you to long-dead oceans. The nitrogen in your muscles will help to turn the sky blue, the phosphorus in your bones will help to turn the coastal waters of North Carolina green, the calcium in your teeth will crush your food between atoms that were mined by mushrooms, and the iron in your blood will kill microbes as it once killed a star. You will also discover that much of what death must inevitably do to your body is already happening among many of your atoms at this very moment and that, nonetheless, you and everyone else you know will always exist somewhere in the fabric of the universe. You are not only made of atoms; you are atoms, and this book, in essence, is an atomic field guide to yourself.… (lisätietoja)
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näyttää 3/3
An amazing book, everything looks a little different after reading it. The whole book is mind-blowing but the last two chapters are in a class by themselves. ( )
  dhenn31 | Jan 24, 2024 |
I was exactly the Carl Sagan loving hippie atheist that this book was conceived/designed/written for. I knew I had to have it nearly the second I heard it existed. (First I had to check its bona fides to make sure that it wasn't a tome of woo. It wasn't.)

But early in the book I struggled to love it as much as I wanted to love it. Was Stager just not yet hitting his stride in balancing his scientific and poetic language? Were my expectations just unreasonable? Was it my common struggle of wanting to understand the issues at a deeper level than the book was written for? Specifically, a lot of the element tracking in this book is down by isotope analysis, yet not all the explanations of why that particular isotope of that element is preferentially absorbed/retained/concentrated were as successful as I would have liked.

Let me back up here. Stager organizes the book element by element -- carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, iron, etc. -- and devotes a chapter to each. So, carbon: where did the carbon in your body come from? How long does it stay there? How does it change (in what molecules is it involved)? How does it leave your body? And so on.

But I fell totally in love during a discussion of the rhizomatic bartering system -- the way that plants share and "buy" nutrients from their fungal neighbors in the soil. Magical and fascinating! I found myself spilling over and trying to explain it all to random people at work.

Once I was hooked, I stayed hooked, and ended up extremely pleased with the book overall. I brought the book to work to keep as a reference and am avidly hoping for some good excuse to look up isotopic accumulation and re-read the sections of the book that I struggled with the first time.

Clearly I need to pitch a "we are all stardust" camp, right?

There were those moments of "science mysticism" that I was longing for -- the "who am I, when I am constantly shedding atoms, molecules, sharing them with my neighbor, the potted plant on the other side of the room..." and also the "breathing the same air as Einstein, Aristotle, Hitler," and the "I remain." moments. Definitely worth a read. And even a re-read. ( )
  greeniezona | Dec 6, 2017 |
This book was a fascinating book, and it most definitely contained a relevant amount of scientific information and background. The information was more than merely trivia - it was presented in a way that provided understanding, rather than the memorization of fact. I also appreciate that the book weaves vivid imagery throughout. There were, however, a handful of times when I felt that the descriptions were over-exaggerated and overly flamboyant. That being said, the book forces the reader to think about their existence, which is an accomplishment in itself. ( )
  Muir_Alex | Mar 18, 2015 |
näyttää 3/3
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Englanninkielinen Wikipedia

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What do atoms have to do with your life? In Your Atomic Self , scientist Curt Stager reveals how they connect you to some of the most amazing things in the universe. You will follow your oxygen atoms through fire and water and from forests to your fingernails. Hydrogen atoms will wriggle into your hair and betray where you live and what you have been drinking. The carbon in your breath will become tree trunks, and the sodium in your tears will link you to long-dead oceans. The nitrogen in your muscles will help to turn the sky blue, the phosphorus in your bones will help to turn the coastal waters of North Carolina green, the calcium in your teeth will crush your food between atoms that were mined by mushrooms, and the iron in your blood will kill microbes as it once killed a star. You will also discover that much of what death must inevitably do to your body is already happening among many of your atoms at this very moment and that, nonetheless, you and everyone else you know will always exist somewhere in the fabric of the universe. You are not only made of atoms; you are atoms, and this book, in essence, is an atomic field guide to yourself.

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