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What's Science Ever Done For Us:

What the Simpsons Can Teach Us About Physics, Robots, Life, and the Universe
Front Cover
15 Reviews
John Wiley & Sons, May 12, 2011 - Science - 272 pages
A playful and entertaining look at science on The Simpsons

This amusing book explores science as presented on the longest-running and most popular animated TV series ever made: The Simpsons. Over the years, the show has examined such issues as genetic mutation, time travel, artificial intelligence, and even aliens. "What's Science Ever Done for Us?" examines these and many other topics through the lens of America's favorite cartoon.

This spirited science guide will inform Simpsons fans and entertain science buffs with a delightful combination of fun and fact. It will be the perfect companion to the upcoming Simpsons movie.

The Simpsons is a magnificent roadmap of modern issues in science. This completely unauthorized, informative, and fun exploration of the science and technology, connected with the world's most famous cartoon family, looks at classic episodes from the show to launch fascinating scientific discussions mixed with intriguing speculative ideas and a dose of humor. Could gravitational lensing create optical illusions, such as when Homer saw someone invisible to everyone else? Is the Coriolis effect strong enough to make all toilets in the Southern Hemisphere flush clockwise, as Bart was so keen to find out? If Earth were in peril, would it make sense to board a rocket, as Marge, Lisa, and Maggie did, and head to Mars? While Bart and Millhouse can't stop time and have fun forever, Paul Halpern explores the theoretical possibilities involving Einstein's theory of time dilation.

Paul Halpern, PhD (Philadelphia, PA) is Professor of Physics and Mathematics at the University of the Sciences in Philadelphia and a 2002 recipient of a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship. He is also the author of The Great Beyond (0-471-46595-X).
  

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Review: What's Science Ever Done For Us: What the Simpsons Can Teach Us About Physics, Robots, Life, and the Universe

User Review  - Darren White - Goodreads

Gave up on it, the science in it was pretty general. You'd do better to just spend your time watching "The Simpsons" Read full review

Review: What's Science Ever Done For Us: What the Simpsons Can Teach Us About Physics, Robots, Life, and the Universe

User Review  - Mickey - Goodreads

What's Science Ever Done for Us? is an immensely readable and enjoyable book. It relates its scientific facts with plenty of real life analogies. I liked the shorter chapters and the overall structure ... Read full review

All 15 reviews »

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Contents

The Simpson Gene
You Say Tomato I Say Tomacco
Burnss Radiant Glow
We All Live in a CellSized Submarine
Lisas Recipe for Life
Look HomerWard Angel
Mechanical Plots
Dohs ex Machina
Springfield the Universe and Beyond
Lisas Scoping Skills
Diverting Rays
The Plunge Down Under
If Astrolabes Could Talk
Cometary Cowabunga
Homers Space Odyssey
Could This Really Be the End?

Perpetual Commotion
Dude Im an Android Chapter 11 Rules for Robots
Chaos in Cartoonland
Fly in the Ointment
No Time to Dohs
Clockstopping
A Toast to the Past
Frinking about the Future
Foolish Earthlings
Is the Universe a Donut?
The Third Dimension of Homer
The Journey Continues
Acknowledgments
The Simpsons Movie Handy Science Checklist
Copyright

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About the author (2011)

Paul Halpern, PHD, is professor of physics and mathematics at the University of the Sciences in Philadelphia and a 2002 recipient of a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship. He is the author of The Great Beyond, also from Wiley.

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