An Urchin in the Storm is a volume of collected essays from paleontologist and well-known science writer Stephen Jay Gould. All but one of the essays had originally appeared in The New York Review of Books. Grouped by theme, the sections of the book deal respectively with the irreducibility of history (and the pleasures and challenges of contingency) in its two principal domains of life and the earth, nature's complexity, the theory and consequence of biological determinism, and rationalism in explanation.
The books reviewed by Gould are:
- "How Does a Panda Fit?":
- "Cardboard Darwinism":
- "Misserving Memory":
- Loren Eiseley, Darwin and the Mysterious Mr. X: New Light on the Evolutionists
- "The Ghost of Protagoras":
- "The Power of Narrative":
- Martin J. S. Rudwick, The Great Devonian Controversy: The Shaping of Scientific Knowledge among Gentlemanly Specialists
- "Deep Time and Ceaseless Motion":
- "Genes on the Brain":
- "Jensen's Last Stand":
- "Nurturing Nature":
- "Triumph of a Naturalist":
- Evelyn Fox Keller, A Feeling for the Organism: The Life and Work of Barbara McClintock
- "Thwarted Genius"
- "Exultation and Explanation":
- G. Evelyn Hutchinson, The Kindly Fruits of the Earth: Recollections of an Embryo Ecologist
- G. Evelyn Hutchinson, An Introduction to Population Ecology
- "Calling Dr. Thomas":
- Lewis Thomas, The Youngest Science: Notes of a Medicine Worker
- "Pleasant Dreams":
- "The Perils of Hope":
- "Utopia, Limited":
- Fritjof Capra, The Turning Point: Science, Society, and the Rising Culture
- "Integrity and Mr. Rifkin":
- "The Quack Detector":
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