Size
How It Explains the World
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
From the New York Times bestselling author of How the World Really Works, a wide-ranging look at the most fundamental governing principle of our world: size, whose laws, limits, and peculiarities offer the key to understanding health, wealth, and even happiness
“No one writes about the great issues of our time with more rigor or erudition than Vaclav Smil.” — Elizabeth Kolbert
To answer the most important questions of our age, we must understand size. Neither bacteria nor empires are immune to its laws. Measuring it is challenging, especially where complex systems like economies are concerned, yet mastering it offers rich rewards: the rise of the West, for example, was a direct result of ever more accurate and standardized measurements.
Using the interdisciplinary approach that has won him a wide readership, Smil draws upon history, earth science, psychology, art, and more to offer fresh insight into some of our biggest challenges, including income inequality, the spread of infectious disease, and the uneven impacts of climate change. Size explains the regularities—and peculiarities—of the key processes shaping life (from microbes to whales), the Earth (from asteroids to volcanic eruptions), technical advances (from architecture to transportation), and societies and economies (from cities to wages). This book about the big and the small, and the relationship between them, answers the big and small questions of human existence:
What makes a human society too big? What about a human being?Which alternative energy sources have the best chance of scaling and reducing our dependence on fossil fuels?Why do tall people make more money?What makes a face beautiful? How about a cathedral?How can changing the size of your plates help you lose weight?
The latest masterwork of “an ambitious and astonishing polymath who swings for fences” (Wired) Size is a mind-bending journey that turns the modern world on its head.
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In this meandering investigation, Smil (Grand Transitions), a geography professor at the University of Manitoba, Canada, meditates on size and its relation to status, intelligence, wealth, and beauty. Offering up loosely connected musings on the role that growth, scale, proportion, and other size-related concepts play in nature and human affairs, Smil contends that human efforts to make ever larger objects, "from TV screens to skyscrapers," are the result of industrialization and its emphasis on developing increasingly efficient means of harvesting energy. He suggests that body size has complex consequences; studies show that taller children have higher test scores and that taller adults make more money than their shorter counterparts. Smil considers limitations on scaling up and observes that while larger wind turbines generate more power, rotor weight increases exponentially with blade length, restricting how big turbines can get. Debunking common myths, Smil notes that while some mathematicians claim the proportions of the golden ratio are "esthetically superior," studies have failed to prove a correlation between how pleasing subjects find a painting or face and how closely it adheres to the ratio. There's plenty of stimulating trivia, but the lack of an overarching framework to give meaning to the disparate facts leaves this feeling inconclusive. This intermittently fascinates, even as it struggles to find the point. Photos.