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Works by Matin Durrani

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Well, I finished it, and I got lousy about doing status updates, but it's all Chapter 3s fault: the bit about cats drinking water had me wanting to post an Easter-cat video of her drinking from the tap/faucet in slow motion. But apparently BookLikes doesn't like embedding any video that isn't YouTube and I don't want to create a freaking YouTube account just so I can post a video of Easter-cat showing the physicists how it's done. So I had a minor hissy fit and sulked for the remaining three chapters.

Be thankful I didn't take my suspicions about the time it takes mammals to urinate any further, is all I'm saying.

I found the section about elephants in chapter 4 both interesting and tense - thumbs down to the authors for trying to inject suspense in the narrative at the expense of a baby elephant. TOTAL SPOILER ALERT: he's fine - happy ending. Take that Durrani and Kalaugher. The parts about the bats and the snakes I sort of knew already, although the level of detail built on the basic, working knowledge I had on both.

Chapter 5 found me mostly feeling sorry for the eels. The whole tone of that section felt very old-school, let's torture them for Science! - I don't think that's the attitude of the authors themselves, but by the end of it, yeah, I mostly just felt really bad for the eels. Though I love the bit about Miguel Wattson at the Tennessee Aquarium (which is brilliantly done, by the way - genius - and I highly recommend taking the time to visit if you're ever in Chattanooga). The section about the bees detecting electrical fields around flowers was something I'd read elsewhere recently, but I loved the information about the Loggerheads. The authors focused on the East Coast of Florida, but my West Coast home (far superior side of the state, in my opinion) beaches are also popular and busy nesting spots for these majestic creatures and it's the normal way of things to see roped off squares of beach during the nesting season. Seeing the females come up the beach is an awesome experience.

Chapter 6 had me at the start, but then started losing me in all the descriptions of mathematical equations and formulas. It rallied briefly with the triggerfish, because they're both awesome and native to Australia, which means, unlike the red garter snakes in Canada, I have an outside chance of seeing a small fish shoot bugs out of the air in the wild. Just imagine if I stumbled across a whole school of them on a particularly buggy morning; it'd be like mother nature's own Bellagio!

The final question about whether animals really know they're using physics was answered, I think, perfectly. Most humans don't know they're using physics every day; Beckham just bends it and doesn't think about how. But I do take exception to the backwards way they approach animal intelligence. We don't know how intelligent animals are, but our default answer is the obvious confirmation biased one. Given the state of the planet, I'm not at all sure the bees and ants don't have it all going on over us. They've both managed to colonise the planet without burning it down, after all.

Mostly, I enjoyed the book; I liked the angle they authors took to bring physics to the everyday world, and make the reader consider just how much we're all beholden to the laws of the universe. The humor mostly fell flat for me, but I appreciated the effort.
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murderbydeath | 3 other reviews | Jan 22, 2022 |
Furry Logic is an interesting book that takes a look at the physics concepts used by a large variety of animal life for survival. The writing style is informal, chatty and whitty. Some of the puns and jokes were just awful, but most led to snickers or laughs, so I can't complain about them too much. While the authors do not go into a great deal of depth with their scientific explanations, the explanations are comprehensive enough to understand the concept. This is a fun, fast paced, fascinating and informative book, especially for the non-physicist and non-biologist. This book is divided into 6 chapters that show how animals make use of physics in terms of heat, forces, fluids, sound, electricity, magnetis and light.

The book covers such topics as flight, how cats drink, heat detection in snakes, the Komodo Dragon's bite, the electric field of flowers and how they attract bees, the sounds of peacocks and how elephants detect sound through the ground, how some animals use polarized light or magnetic fields to determine direction, how electric eels produce their electricity, why dogs shake themselves dry, why giant squid have such large eyes, and many more.

The book includes a section of colour photographs and has a few illustrations to explain concepts spread throughout the book. Unfortunately, the book did not contain a list of references or a bibliography, which is a bit strange for a science book!
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ElentarriLT | 3 other reviews | Mar 24, 2020 |
The first half was vastly better to me than this latter half. I thought there was some fascinating information in here but I found myself furthering my research from other sources because this didn't provide enough. However, like I mentioned, I am a visual learner so, I'm naturally more inclined to get more out of YouTube and other videos. Definitely wasn't to technical and would worked great as a baseline informational read. I still can't help feeling the last two to three chapters lost the energy of the first.

Updates with comments and quotes:

Intro & Ch 1

Ch 2 & 3

Ch 4 & 5

Ch 6 & conclusion

Thanks to Flat Book Society for letting me hop into another buddy read!
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WhiskeyintheJar | 3 other reviews | Mar 18, 2019 |
Generally interesting examination of physics as it applies to animals. Discussions range from how bats use echolocation to navigate through their environment to why mosquitoes aren't squashed by raindrops many times their mass.
½
 
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dickmanikowski | 3 other reviews | Sep 1, 2017 |

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