
What's Gotten into You
The Story of Your Body's Atoms, from the Big Bang Through Last Night's Dinner
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Narrado por:
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Mike Chamberlain
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De:
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Dan Levitt
Acerca de esta escucha
For listeners of Bill Bryson, Neil deGrasse Tyson, and Siddhartha Mukherjee, a wondrous, wildly ambitious, and vastly entertaining work of popular science that tells the awe-inspiring story of the elements that make up the human body, and how these building blocks of life travelled billions of miles and across billions of years to make us who we are.
Every one of us contains a billion times more atoms than all the grains of sand in the earth’s deserts. If you weigh 150 pounds, you’ve got enough carbon to make 25 pounds of charcoal, enough salt to fill a saltshaker, enough chlorine to disinfect several backyard swimming pools, and enough iron to forge a 3-inch nail. But how did these elements combine to make us human?
All matter—everything around us and within us—has an ultimate birthday: the day the universe was born. This informative, eye-opening, and eminently enjoyable book is the story of our atoms’ long strange journey from the Big Bang to the creation of stars, through the assembly of Planet Earth, and the formation of life as we know it. It’s also the story of the scientists who made groundbreaking discoveries and unearthed extraordinary insights into the composition of life. Behind their unexpected findings were investigations marked by fierce rivalries, obsession, heartbreak, flashes of insight, and flukes of blind luck. Ultimately they’ve helped us understand the mystery of our existence: how a quadrillion atoms made of particles from the Big Bang now animate each of our cells.
Shaped by the curious mind and bold vision of science and history documentarian Dan Levitt, this wondrous book is no less than the story of life itself.
Supplemental enhancement PDF accompanies the audiobook.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.
©2023 Dan Levitt (P)2023 HarperCollins PublishersLos oyentes también disfrutaron...
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Historia
When we talk about human history, we often focus on great leaders, population forces, and decisive wars. But how has the earth itself determined our destiny? Our planet wobbles, driving changes in climate that forced the transition from nomadism to farming. Mountainous terrain led to the development of democracy in Greece. Atmospheric circulation patterns later on shaped the progression of global exploration, colonization, and trade. Even today, voting behavior in the southeast United States ultimately follows the underlying pattern of 75 million-year-old sediments from an ancient sea.
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GREAT Book with a Narrator Who's Falling Asleep
- De aaron en 08-02-20
De: Lewis Dartnell
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Gulp
- Adventures on the Alimentary Canal
- De: Mary Roach
- Narrado por: Emily Woo Zeller
- Duración: 8 h y 21 m
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Best-selling author Mary Roach returns with a new adventure to the invisible realm we carry around inside. Roach takes us down the hatch on an unforgettable tour. The alimentary canal is classic Mary Roach terrain: The questions explored in Gulp are as taboo, in their way, as the cadavers in Stiff and every bit as surreal as the universe of zero gravity explored in Packing for Mars. Why is crunchy food so appealing? Why is it so hard to find words for flavors and smells? Why doesn’t the stomach digest itself? How much can you eat before your stomach bursts?
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Funtastic Voyage
- De Mel en 04-05-13
De: Mary Roach
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Bonk
- The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex
- De: Mary Roach
- Narrado por: Sandra Burr
- Duración: 9 h y 29 m
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The study of sexual physiology has been a paying career or a diverting sideline for scientists as far-ranging as Leonardo da Vinci and James Watson. The research has taken place behind the closed doors of laboratories, brothels, MRI centers, pig farms, sex-toy R&D labs, and Alfred Kinsey's attic.
Mary Roach, "The funniest science writer in the country", devoted the past two years to stepping behind those doors. In Bonk, Roach shows us how and why sexual arousal and orgasm can be so hard to achieve and what science is doing to slowly make the bedroom a more satisfying place.
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Absolutely Wonderful!
- De Gurmukh en 07-05-08
De: Mary Roach
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The Things We Make
- The Unknown History of Invention from Cathedrals to Soda Cans
- De: Bill Hammack
- Narrado por: Jonathan Todd Ross
- Duración: 7 h y 43 m
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For millennia, humans have used one simple method to solve problems. Whether it's planting crops, building skyscrapers, developing photographs, or designing the first microchip, all creators follow the same steps to engineer progress. But this powerful method, the "engineering method", is an all but hidden process that few of us have heard of—let alone understand—but that influences every aspect of our lives.
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Blends history and technical method explanations
- De Aaron Trachtman en 05-26-23
De: Bill Hammack
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Who Ate the First Oyster?
- The Extraordinary People Behind the Greatest Firsts in History
- De: Cody Cassidy
- Narrado por: Dennis Boutsikaris
- Duración: 4 h y 55 m
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Who wore the first pants? Who painted the first masterpiece? Who first rode the horse? Who invented soap? This madcap adventure across ancient history uses everything from modern genetics to archaeology to uncover the geniuses behind these and other world-changing innovations. With a sharp sense of humor and boundless enthusiasm for the wonders of our ancient ancestors, Who Ate the First Oyster? profiles the perpetrators of the greatest firsts and catastrophes of prehistory.
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It could be better...
- De Alex en 04-06-21
De: Cody Cassidy
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The End Is Always Near
- Apocalyptic Moments, from the Bronze Age Collapse to Nuclear Near Misses
- De: Dan Carlin
- Narrado por: Dan Carlin
- Duración: 7 h y 55 m
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In The End Is Always Near, Dan Carlin looks at questions and historical events that force us to consider what sounds like fantasy; that we might suffer the same fate that all previous eras did. Will our world ever become a ruin for future archaeologists to dig up and explore? The questions themselves are both philosophical and like something out of The Twilight Zone.
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Hardcore Histories Greatest Hits
- De Steven Glover en 10-31-19
De: Dan Carlin
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The Book of General Ignorance
- De: John Mitchinson, John Lloyd
- Narrado por: uncredited
- Duración: 4 h y 20 m
- Versión resumida
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Misconceptions, misunderstandings, and flawed facts finally get the heave-ho in this humorous, downright humiliating book of reeducation based on the phenomenal British best seller. Challenging what most of us assume to be verifiable truths in areas like history, literature, science, nature, and more, The Book of General Ignorance is a witty “gotcha” compendium of how little we actually know about anything. It’ll have you scratching your head wondering why we even bother to go to school.
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Interesting.
- De Dad Hawkbird en 12-07-08
De: John Mitchinson, y otros
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Proto
- How One Ancient Language Went Global
- De: Laura Spinney
- Narrado por: Emma Spurgin-Hussey
- Duración: 9 h y 3 m
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Daughter. Duhitár-. Dustr. Dukte. Listen to these English, Sanskrit, Armenian and Lithuanian words, all meaning the same thing, and you hear echoes of one of history’s most unlikely journeys. All four languages—along with hundreds of others, from French and Gaelic, to Persian and Polish—trace their origins to an ancient tongue spoken as the last ice age receded. This language, which we call Proto-Indo-European, was born between Europe and Asia and exploded out of its cradle, fragmenting as it spread east and west.
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Brilliant research and narration
- De Dr. Krishnendu Ray en 05-16-25
De: Laura Spinney
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The Zoologist's Guide to the Galaxy
- What Animals on Earth Reveal About Aliens - and Ourselves
- De: Arik Kershenbaum
- Narrado por: Samuel West
- Duración: 11 h y 13 m
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Scientists are confident that life exists elsewhere in the universe. Yet rather than taking a realistic approach to what aliens might be like, we imagine that life on other planets is the stuff of science fiction. The time has come to abandon our fantasies of space invaders and movie monsters and place our expectations on solid scientific footing. But short of alien's landing in New York City, how do we know what they are like?
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A zoologist looks at what aliens we might meet
- De Elisabeth Carey en 04-06-21
De: Arik Kershenbaum
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The WEIRDest People in the World
- How the West Became Psychologically Peculiar and Particularly Prosperous
- De: Joseph Henrich
- Narrado por: Korey Jackson
- Duración: 19 h y 3 m
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In The WEIRDest People in the World, Joseph Henrich draws on cutting-edge research in anthropology, psychology, economics, and evolutionary biology to explore these questions and more. He illuminates the origins and evolution of family structures, marriage, and religion, and the profound impact these cultural transformations had on human psychology. Mapping these shifts through ancient history and late antiquity, Henrich reveals that the most fundamental institutions of kinship and marriage changed dramatically under pressure from the Roman Catholic Church.
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Lots of mispronounced words
- De Phil F en 10-24-20
De: Joseph Henrich
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Waves in an Impossible Sea
- How Everyday Life Emerges from the Cosmic Ocean
- De: Matt Strassler
- Narrado por: Christopher Grove
- Duración: 11 h y 31 m
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In Waves in an Impossible Sea, physicist Matt Strassler tells a startling tale of elementary particles, human experience, and empty space. He begins with a simple mystery of motion. When we drive at highway speeds with the windows down, the wind beats against our faces. Yet our planet hurtles through the cosmos at 150 miles per second, and we feel nothing of it. How can our voyage be so tranquil when, as Einstein discovered, matter warps space, and space deflects matter? The answer, Strassler reveals, is that empty space is a sea, albeit a paradoxically strange one.
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No pdf
- De Mark en 01-14-25
De: Matt Strassler
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Storm in a Teacup
- The Physics of Everyday Life
- De: Helen Czerski
- Narrado por: Chloe Massey
- Duración: 10 h y 13 m
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In Storm in a Teacup, Helen Czerski provides the tools to alter the way we see everything around us by linking ordinary objects and occurrences, like popcorn popping, coffee stains, and fridge magnets, to big ideas like climate change, the energy crisis, and innovative medical testing.
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Everyday Physics Thoroughly Explained
- De Amazon Customer en 01-19-17
De: Helen Czerski
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Merlin’s Tour of the Universe, Revised and Updated for the Twenty-First Century
- A Traveler’s Guide to Blue Moons and Black Holes, Mars, Stars, and Everything Far
- De: Neil deGrasse Tyson
- Narrado por: Jim Meskimen, André Santana, Bronson Pinchot, y otros
- Duración: 4 h y 18 m
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In Neil deGrasse Tyson’s delightful journey through the cosmos, his fictional character Merlin responds to popular questions asked by adults and children alike. Merlin, a timeless visitor from Planet Omniscia in the Andromeda Galaxy, has observed firsthand many of the major scientific events of Earth’s history.
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Learning to love Space
- De Tara Nichol en 02-15-25
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How to Make an Apple Pie from Scratch
- In Search of the Recipe for Our Universe, from the Origins of Atoms to the Big Bang
- De: Harry Cliff
- Narrado por: Harry Cliff
- Duración: 11 h y 36 m
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Harry Cliff - a University of Cambridge particle physicist and researcher on the Large Hadron Collider - sets out in pursuit of answers. He ventures to the largest underground research facility in the world, deep beneath Italy's Gran Sasso mountains, where scientists gaze into the heart of the Sun using the most elusive of particles, the ghostly neutrino. He visits CERN in Switzerland to explore the "Antimatter Factory," where the stuff of science fiction is manufactured daily (and we're close to knowing whether it falls up).
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Excellent
- De Adrian en 01-06-23
De: Harry Cliff
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Fuzz
- When Nature Breaks the Law
- De: Mary Roach
- Narrado por: Mary Roach
- Duración: 9 h y 17 m
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What’s to be done about a jaywalking moose? A bear caught breaking and entering? A murderous tree? Three hundred years ago, animals that broke the law would be assigned legal representation and put on trial. These days, as New York Times best-selling author Mary Roach discovers, the answers are best found not in jurisprudence but in science: the curious science of human-wildlife conflict, a discipline at the crossroads of human behavior and wildlife biology.
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The footnotes
- De Alex en 09-24-21
De: Mary Roach
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It's a Gas
- The Sublime and Elusive Elements That Expand Our World
- De: Mark Miodownik
- Narrado por: Daniel Weyman
- Duración: 6 h y 50 m
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Gases are all around us—they fill our lungs, power our movement, create stars, and warm our atmosphere. Often invisible and sometimes odorless, these ubiquitous substances are also the least understood materials in our world, and always have been. It wasn’t long ago that gases were seen as the work of ancient spirits: the sudden closing of a door after a change in airflow signaled a ghost’s presence.
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A Nice Addition to the Other Books
- De Zach Brunson en 10-15-24
De: Mark Miodownik
Great stuff
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Levitt has managed to synthesize such a beautiful story. He’s filled it with so much information that any student could use as a jump-off point for deeper investigation.
I appreciate Dan Levitt’s passion, humanity and brilliance. We are all better for his contribution to understanding who we, as a species are and where we came from. He is a world citizen of the first order
<i>What’s gotten into you”</i> is a collection of the greatest scientific discoveries regarding how humans came to be. I’m in awe of this story. It is something I hoped to write some day. I’ll be re-reading this for years to come.
Despite the title’s catchy play on a phrase, this book really deserves a title like, “The greatest story ever told.” Alas, others have already beat Levitt to it.
This book really deserves a title like, “The greatest story ever told”
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Fascinating story told in understandable way
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Interestingly Educational
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Mind blowing!
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The work itself parallels that ability to make me understand, not treat me like an idiot or a world-renowned scientist. Threading that needle is hard, but Levitt did it beautifully.
A joyful journey from beginning to end
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One of the Very Best Science Books I have Read
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For myself, I've always been interested in Physics, but this book has kindled new interested in Biology,
The best history of science I've ever experienced.
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Greatest story ever told
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Science for non-specialist readers--fascinating!
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