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S. No.

Book Title / Author Theme of Book

37. Neatly describes the human race from the point of view of
a keen observer. Lots of illustrations, examples.

Desmond Morris

38. Explains the nature of Universe with special emphasis on


Black Holes..... .
Stephen Hawking

39. The classic Toffler trilogy..... Talks about nature of power,


development of power over thousand of years, changes sweeping
the world and man's enability to cope with the same.
Alvin Toffler

40. A scientist's view of uncertainties in nature, laws of nature, man's


limitations in understanding nature. Serious stuff meant for the
John L. Casti mature reader.

41. It is the author's classic exploration of the connections between


Fritjof Capra Eastern mysticism and modern physics. An international bestseller, the book's
central thesis, that the mystical traditions of the East constitute a coherent
philosophical framework within which the most advanced Western theories of
the physical world can be accommodated, has not only withstood the test of
time but is ever more emphatically endorsed by ongoing experimentation and
research.

42. The science of chaos cuts across traditional scientific disciplines,


James Gleick tying together unrelated kinds of wildness and irregularity, from the turbulence
of weather to the complicated rhythms of the human heart, from the design of
snowflakes to the whorls of windswept desert sands.

Science Fiction

43. Tantalizingly talks about man's first encounter with ET life.


Carl Sagan

44. Talks about the laws of robotics and man's relationship with
Isaac Asimov robots.

45. A great series on man's trip to Jupiter, a rogue computer


Arthur C. Clarke HAL, ET life ..... Truly a masterpiece.

46. A chilling narration of what life may become in the age of genetic
Aldous Huxley science and biotechnology.

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