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Here are the details for The Stickler's Guide to Science in the Age of Misinformation:
Author: R. Philip Bouchard
Narrator: Joe Ochman
Category: General Nonfiction, Science & Technology
Publisher: Hachette Audio
Release Date: November 23, 2021
Format: Unabridged audiobook
Length: Approximately 9 hours 8 minutes (Hachette Book Group)
What the book is about
Bouchard examines common scientific phrases, metaphors, and media shortcuts that often oversimplify or distort scientific concepts. Rather than focusing primarily on deliberate misinformation, the book explores how everyday language can create misunderstandings about science. Topics include:
The myth of "right-brained" and "left-brained" people
Why "superfoods" is more of a marketing term than a scientific one
Misconceptions about climate change and "global warming"
Why DNA is not literally a "blueprint"
Why astronauts float in orbit
How scientific concepts become distorted through headlines and popular explanations (Hachette Book Group)
Who might enjoy it
This audiobook is well suited for:
General readers interested in science literacy
Educators and students
Anyone who wants to think more critically about science reporting and popular science claims
Listeners who enjoy accessible, conversational science writing rather than highly technical discussions (Apple)
Notable background
R. Philip Bouchard is also known for helping design the classic educational video game The Oregon Trail. He has academic training in botany and has spent much of his career creating educational media. (Hachette Book Group)
Overall, the audiobook is less a guide to spotting fake news and more a tour through common scientific misconceptions, showing where popular explanations diverge from scientific reality. (Apple)
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Based on the book's published table of contents, here is a chapter-wise anecdote and tagline that captures the central misconception each chapter addresses. (These anecdotes are interpretive summaries, not direct excerpts from the book.) (catalog.freelibrary.org)
| Chapter | Anecdote | Tagline |
|---|---|---|
| 1. The Lungs of the Planet | A student learns that forests are Earth's "lungs," then wonders why trees release oxygen only after first making it through photosynthesis. | "Nature's metaphors are helpful—until we mistake them for reality." |
| 2. No Gravity in Space | A child watches astronauts float and assumes gravity vanishes beyond Earth, only to discover gravity is what keeps them in orbit. | "Weightlessness is not the absence of gravity." |
| 3. Survival of the Fittest | An office worker interprets evolution as "the strongest survive" and misses the role of adaptation and environment. | "Fitness means fit for the moment, not strongest forever." |
| 4. The Five Senses | During a cooking class, someone realizes balance, temperature, pain, and body position are senses too. | "Humans experience far more than five windows to reality." |
| 5. High Levels of Radiation | Two headlines mention radiation; one concerns a medical scan, the other a nuclear accident, creating unnecessary panic. | "The dose tells the story, not the word." |
| 6. Killing Germs | A shopper sprays disinfectant everywhere, forgetting that many microbes are harmless—or beneficial. | "Not every microbe is an enemy." |
| 7. Twenty-Four Hours a Day | A curious teenager discovers Earth's rotation is not exactly 24 hours and that timekeeping requires constant adjustment. | "Even the clock is an approximation." |
| 8. The Blueprint of Life | Someone expects a DNA test to predict their future, only to learn genes interact with countless biological factors. | "DNA writes possibilities, not destinies." |
| 9. Superfoods and Toxins | A health enthusiast spends heavily on miracle foods while overlooking overall dietary habits. | "Nutrition is a pattern, not a magic ingredient." |
| 10. Full of Energy | A motivational speaker praises "positive energy," while a physicist quietly notes that energy has a precise scientific meaning. | "Scientific words deserve scientific definitions." |
| 11. Left-Brained and Right-Brained | A manager labels employees as logical or creative thinkers and ignores the brain's remarkable integration. | "Your brain is a partnership, not a rivalry." |
| 12. Global Warming | A cold winter day prompts claims that climate change is a myth, confusing weather with climate. | "One day is weather; decades are climate." |
| 13. Epidemics and Pandemics | During a disease outbreak, people focus on alarming labels instead of understanding transmission and scale. | "Names inform, but understanding protects." |
Overall Book Tagline
"Question the shortcut, examine the science."
The book's central message is that many popular scientific phrases—such as "global warming," "superfoods," "left-brained people," and "the lungs of the planet"—are useful shorthand but often become sources of misunderstanding when taken literally.