Nonscience
Template:Short description Template:Italic title Template:Multiple issues {{#invoke:other uses|otheruses}} Nonscience is a 1971 book which claims to have the longest and most complex title in publishing history.
Its full title is Template:Not a typo, London: Wolfe Publishing (Template:ISBN). The book was updated and reissued in 2020 as Nonscience Returns by the Curtis Press.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Its author Brian J. Ford pokes fun at those who conceal their lack of real expertise by using long and complicated words, whilst making the serious point that many people are fooled by these so-called experts. Some consider the book prescient, thinking that modern society, where decisions are taken by unseen experts, is much as Ford predicted.
Spanish editionEdit
In the Spanish edition the title was rendered as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} [translation by Oscar Muslera], Libertad y Cambio, Buenos Aires: Granica Editor.
ReviewsEdit
In Britain, the book was reviewed in the following publications:
- The Times Higher Education Supplement, October 22, 1971
- Atticus Column, Sunday Times, October 24, 1971
- Irish Press, October 30, 1971
- Time Out magazine, November 12, 1971.
- New Statesman, November 12, 1971.
- Nature: 234, December 3, 1971
- The Times Educational Supplement, December 3, 1971
- Times Literary Supplement, January 21, 1972
- Mensa Journal, January 22, 1972
The book was also featured on the BBC television show Tomorrow's World.
See alsoEdit
- Fashionable Nonsense: Postmodern Intellectuals' Abuse of Science