It's slightly unusual
for me to read a science book, but this seemed fairly interesting. It
looks at, unsurprisingly, seven elements (iron, carbon, gold, silver,
uranium, titanium and silicon) and their impact on the world. The
author, John Browne, was a bigwig with BP.
Each element gets its
own chapter, which progresses more or less in chronological order of
use (both within chapters and between them, so silicon, being the
most 'modern' element is naturally last). There's an interesting mix
of history, economics and chemistry.
I particularly found
the gold and silver chapters interesting (especially the negative
spiral of Bunker Hunt's enormous hoard of silver), but carbon dragged
a little.
As someone born in the
first generation to really have computer games, mobile phones and the
internet it was also interesting to read about the hopes for uranium,
with nuclear-powered cars and trains anticipated but never achieved.
I do feel certain bits
were missed that could have been included. For example, Henry Ford
gets a mention (fair enough), but Benz and Daimler do not. There was
an interesting piece about glass-making in Venice and telescopes,
but glass and its magnifying powers also had a huge impact on
chemistry and biology. The ability to zoom in allowed for clearer
images of very small things, and glass being chemically neutral
enabled scientists to use it to experiment on other things, but
neither of these aspects was referred to.
The author makes use of
his own personal experience of and interest in various related
matters. This is a double-edged sword. The Venice glass-making piece
was worth reading, but a little more science and a little less
personal interest would have made the book better.
I was also mildly
amused to read in the conclusion the author criticise those who
pollute [counting carbon dioxide as pollution], given he was a bigwig
with BP. I'm not a green but that's a bit rich. On a similar note, too many of
the photos were the author with a politician/businessman/scientist instead of relevant to the subject.
There was a lot of
genuinely interesting stuff in the book, and I did enjoy reading it.
More focus on the subject matter and less on the author would have
improved it.
Thaddeus
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