The Disappearing Spoon: a science history podcast with Sam Kean

Podcast autorstwa Sam Kean, Bleav - Wtorki

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110 Odcinki

  1. The Screwiest—and Perhaps Most Original—Idea of the 20th Century

    Opublikowany: 26.04.2022
  2. The Bird with Four Sexes

    Opublikowany: 19.04.2022
  3. When the Brain Deceives Itself

    Opublikowany: 12.04.2022
  4. Stephen Hawking and the Black Hole Mistake that Made His Career

    Opublikowany: 5.04.2022
  5. Albert Einstein and the Worst Prediction in the History of Science

    Opublikowany: 29.03.2022
  6. How to Be Smarter than Isaac Newton

    Opublikowany: 22.03.2022
  7. Claude Monet and Bee Purple

    Opublikowany: 15.03.2022
  8. The Unsung Heroes of Darwin’s Evolution

    Opublikowany: 8.03.2022
  9. The Sinister Angel Singers of Rome

    Opublikowany: 7.12.2021
  10. The Murderous Origins of the American Medical Association

    Opublikowany: 30.11.2021
  11. The Big ‘What If’ of Cancer

    Opublikowany: 23.11.2021
  12. The Harvard Medical School Janitor Who Solved a Murder

    Opublikowany: 16.11.2021
  13. Burn After Watching

    Opublikowany: 9.11.2021
  14. History’s First Car Crash Victim

    Opublikowany: 2.11.2021
  15. Real Life Zombies

    Opublikowany: 26.10.2021
  16. How Climate Change Will Remake the Human Body

    Opublikowany: 19.10.2021
  17. The ‘Mary Poppins’ Cancer

    Opublikowany: 12.10.2021
  18. Kangaroo (and Pig and Monkey and Dog and Donkey) Courts

    Opublikowany: 5.10.2021
  19. Icepick Surgeon audiobook excerpt

    Opublikowany: 13.07.2021
  20. The Anatomy Riots

    Opublikowany: 1.06.2021

4 / 6

A topsy-turvy science-y history podcast by Sam Kean. I examine overlooked stories from our past: the dental superiority of hunter-gatherers, the crooked Nazis who saved thousands of American lives, the American immigrants who developed the most successful cancer screening tool in history, the sex lives of dinosaurs, and much, much more. These are charming little tales that never made the history books, but these small moments can be surprisingly powerful. These are the cases where history gets inverted, where the footnote becomes the real story.

Visit the podcast's native language site