We live in a world that is known, every corner thoroughly explored. But has this knowledge cost us the ability to wonder? Wonder, Caspar Henderson argues, is at its most supremely valuable in just such a world because it reaffirms our humanity and gives us hope for the future. That's the power of wonder, and that's what we should aim to cultivate in our lives. But what are the wonders of the modern world?
Henderson's brilliant exploration borrows from the form of one of the oldest and most widely known sources of wonder: maps. Large, detailed mappae mundi invited people in medieval Europe to vividly imagine places and possibilities they had never seen before: manticores with the head of a man, the body of a lion, and the stinging tail of a scorpion; tribes of one-eyed men who fought griffins for diamonds; and fearsome Scythian warriors who drank the blood of their enemies from their skulls. As outlandish as these maps and the stories that went with them sound to us today, Henderson argues that our views of the world today are sometimes no less incomplete or misleading. Scientists are only beginning to map the human brain, for example, revealing it as vastly more complex than any computer we can conceive. Our current understanding of physical reality is woefully incomplete. A New Map of Wonders explores these and other realms of the wonderful, in different times and cultures and in the present day, taking readers from Aboriginal Australian landscapes to sacred sites in Great Britain, all the while keeping sight questions such as the cognitive basis of wonder and the relationship between wonder and science.
Beautifully illustrated and written with wit and moral complexity, this sequel to The Book of Barely Imagined Beings is a fascinating account of the power of wonder and an unforgettable meditation on its importance to our future.
Introduction
1. The Rainbow and the Star: Light
2. The Gathering of the Universal Light into Luminous Bodies: Life
3. Three Billion Beats: Heart
4. A Hyperobject in the Head: Brain
5. Edge of the Orison: Self
6. Of Maps and Dreams: World
7. Future Wonders: Adventures with Perhapsatron
Afterword: The Wonderer and His Shadow
Bibliography
Thanks
Picture credits
Text credits
Index
Caspar Henderson has been a journalist and an editor with various publications and broadcasters, including BBC Radio 4, the Financial Times, the Independent, Nature, New Scientist and openDemocracy (where he was senior editor for three years). He is a past recipient of an IUCN-Reuters Award for best environmental reporting in Western Europe. His debut, The Book of Barely Imagined Beings (Granta, 2012), won the Roger Deakin Award of the Society of Authors and the Jerwood Award of the Royal Society of Literature, and was shortlisted for the Royal Society Winton Prize for Science Books.
"Part celebration and part meditation, an elegant study of things that should awe and amaze us – and why we are capable of awe and amazement in the first place [...] In this treatise, Henderson (The Book of Barely Imagined Beings), who admits to "no qualifications beyond curiosity and stubbornness," advances many points that ought to give us all pause [...] As enjoyable as the text are the marginal notes, peppered with quotations on all sorts of matters from great thinkers across the ages [...] A wonderful book and just the thing for cogitators."
– Kirkus Reviews
"A wondrous brew of science, history, and sheer exhilaration. Read it and marvel."
– Sarah Bakewell, author of At the Existentialist Café
"What a thrillingly uplifting antidote Henderson has created to these grim and gloomy times! To be reminded of all the wonder in the world is a marvelous gift, all the more so because it is so beautifully presented. And if there is anyone who would not delight in this magical compendium of true things, they are surely the ones who need it most."
– Philip Ball, author of Curiosity: How Science Became Interested in Everything
"For there to be science, there must first be wonder. Henderson teaches us how to wonder anew with a new vision of science illuminated by a rich range of literature, philosophy, art, and music. He quite simply reweaves the rainbow."
– Hugh Aldersey-Williams, author of Tide: The Science and Lore of the Greatest Force on Earth
"For Henderson, the universe is constantly birthing wonders. A book that tries to give articulate voice to the gasps of astonishment at each birth is almost bound to fail. Yet this is a glorious success: breathless but musical; humble but confident; smart, kind, and glittering. It will turn the most jaded reductionist into a delighted child."
– Charles Foster, author of Being a Beast
"This book does exactly what it says on the cover, and shows us where wonder is to be found. His account of familiar phenomena shows how unfamiliar and extraordinary they really are."
– Philip Pullman, author of the His Dark Materials trilogy