Who would sponsor a gathering of scientists and mathematicians to discuss a really trendy scientific topic? The Pope. The Emergence of Complexity in Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, and Biology is the proceedings of the Pontifical Academy of Science’s 1992 session on complexity (in all its numerous forms). Though some lectures are in English and some in French, there’s plenty for the monolingual reader. The clerics analyse the “Galileo affair”, cryptographer Adi Shamir gets a Vatican medal, and the book ends with a solemn pontifical address. White smoke on this one. Published by Pontificia Academia Scientarum, distributed by Princeton University Press, £32.50/$39.50, ISBN 8877610557/0691012385.
More from New Scientist
Explore the latest news, articles and features
Popular articles
Trending New Scientist articles
1
Red-light therapy does have health benefits but not the ones you think
2
Man destined for Alzheimer's may have been saved by accidental therapy
3
Woman in cancer remission without treatment in highly unusual case
4
We have figured out a new way to send messages into the past
5
A lost ancient script reveals how writing as we know it really began
6
Extinct relative of koalas discovered in Western Australia
7
Human heads have changed shape a lot in the past 100 years
8
Huge landslide in Alaska caused 481m-high tsunami
9
Pressure from individual particles measured for the first time
10
Deforestation could trigger Amazon tipping point in the 2030s



