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Obras por New Scientist
Does Anything Eat Wasps?: And 101 Other Unsettling, Witty Answers to Questions You Never Thought You Wanted to Ask (2005) 1,174 exemplares
Nothing : from absolute zero to cosmic oblivion - amazing insights into nothingness (2013) 172 exemplares
How to Make a Tornado: The Strange and Wonderful Things That Happen When Scientists Break Free (2009) 123 exemplares
Question Everything: 132 Science Questions - And Their Unexpected Answers (New Scientist) (2014) 82 exemplares
Will We Ever Speak Dolphin?: And 130 Other Science Questions Answered (Wellcome) (2012) 56 exemplares
The Universe Next Door: A Journey Through 55 Parallel Worlds and Possible Futures (2017) 47 exemplares
Do Sparrows Like Bach?: The Strange and Wonderful Things that Are Discovered When Scientists Break Free (2010) 44 exemplares
How Numbers Work: Discover the strange and beautiful world of mathematics (Instant Expert) (2018) 37 exemplares
The End of Money: The story of bitcoin, cryptocurrencies and the blockchain revolution (2017) 32 exemplares
How Evolution Explains Everything About Life: From Darwin's brilliant idea to today's epic theory (New… (2017) 24 exemplares
Your Conscious Mind: Unravelling the greatest mystery of the human brain (Instant Expert) (2017) 21 exemplares
New Scientist 17 exemplares
Stroke a Martian and 99 Other Things to Do Before You Die: Plus 5 to Do Afterwards (2005) 16 exemplares
Why the Universe Exists: How particle physics unlocks the secrets of everything (Instant Expert) (2017) 15 exemplares
A Journey Through The Universe: A traveler's guide from the center of the sun to the edge of the unknown (Instant… (2018) 14 exemplares
This is Planet Earth: Your ultimate guide to the world we call home (Instant Expert) (2018) 12 exemplares
Machines that Think: Everything you need to know about the coming age of artificial intelligence (New Scientist Instant… (2017) 10 exemplares
New Scientist - A Journey Through the Universe 4 exemplares
Why Do Boys Have Nipples?: And 71 other weird questions that only science can answer (2019) 3 exemplares
Relativity: Einstein’s mind-bending Universe (New Scientist: The Collection Book 4) (2017) 3 exemplares
John Murray Does Anything Eat Wasps 3 exemplares
Where Do Astronauts Put Their Dirty Underwear?: And 73 other weird questions that only science can answer (2020) 2 exemplares
New Scientist, 15 January 2022 2 exemplares
The human story 2 exemplares
New Scientist, 26 May 1988 1 exemplar
Experiências Para Cientistas de Sofá 1 exemplar
New Scientist, 10 May 1962 1 exemplar
Machines That Think: Everything You Need to Know About the Coming Age of Artificial Intelligence (2017) 1 exemplar
New Scientist, 8 May 2021 1 exemplar
The New Scientist, 4 July 1957 1 exemplar
New Scientist, 28 April 1977 1 exemplar
The New Scientist, 1 January 1959 1 exemplar
New Scientist, 10 September 2011 1 exemplar
New Scientist, 23 June 2001 1 exemplar
New Scientist - 07 September 2013 1 exemplar
New Scientist, 11 January 1979 1 exemplar
The Cambridge Handbook: an Insider's Guide to Living and Working in the Cambridge Cluster 1 exemplar
Life: Origin, Evolution, Extinction: The epic story of life on earth (New Scientist: The Collection) (2016) 1 exemplar
Mind-Expanding Ideas: The most incredible concepts in science (New Scientist: The Collection Book 3) (2016) 1 exemplar
'Patterns of war: the rules of military engagement need a rethink to cope with modern conflicts' in New Scientist 2771,… (2010) 1 exemplar
Big Questions, The 1 exemplar
Human Brain, The 1 exemplar
The New Scientist, 6 December 1956 1 exemplar
28 New Scientist magazine 1 exemplar
A Origem de (Quase) Tudo 1 exemplar
New Scientist, 15 December 1990 1 exemplar
New Scientist, 14 October 2006 1 exemplar
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Conhecimento Comum
Membros
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Associated Authors
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 928
- Membros
- 5,276
- Popularidade
- #4,722
- Avaliação
- 3.4
- Críticas
- 64
- ISBN
- 231
- Línguas
- 15
Following on from Does Anything Eat Wasps? and Why Can’t Elephants Jump?, here are 101 more questions asked by New Scientist readers with answers also supplied by New Scientist readers. There is a whole chapter on why one might want one’s martini to be shaken, not stirred, with accounts from readers of direct experimentation on the options. Otherwise lots of wholesome science stuff. (And no, we won’t ever speak Dolphin; they don’t really have language to the same level that we do.)… (mais)