Galileo's Middle Finger
Heretics, Activists, and One Scholar's Search for Justice
- Published: 10 March 2015
- ISBN: 9780698155961
- Imprint: PEN US eBook Adult
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 368
Kirkus (starred review):
"Let us be grateful that there are writers like Dreger who have the wits and the guts to fight for truth."
Dan Savage, founder of "It Gets Better" Project; author of American Savage:
"If there ever there were a book that showed how democracy requires smart activism and solid data--and how that kind of work can be defeated by moneyed interests, conservative agendas, inept governments, and duplicitous "activists"--this is it. Galileo's Middle Finger reads like a thriller. The cliché applies: I literally couldn't put it down. Alice Dreger leaves you wondering what's going to happen to America if our universities continue to turn into corporate brands afraid of daring research and unpopular ideas about who we are."
Edward O. Wilson, University Research Professor, Emeritus, Harvard University:
"In this important work, Dreger reveals the shocking extent to which some disciplines have been infested by mountebanks, poseurs, and even worse, political activists who put ideology ahead of science."
Elizabeth Loftus, Distinguished Professor, University of California, Irvine:
"Galileo's Middle Finger is a brilliant exposé of people that want to kill scientific messengers who challenge cherished beliefs. Dreger's stunning research into the conflicts between activists and scholars, and her revelations about the consequences for their lives (including hers), is deeply profound and downright captivating. I couldn't put this book down!"
Steven Pinker, Johnstone Professor of Psychology, Harvard University; author of The Blank Slate and How the Mind Works:
"In activism as in war, truth is the first casualty. Alice Dreger, herself a truthful activist, exposes some of shameful campaigns of defamation and harassment that have been directed against scientists whose ideas have offended the sensibilities of politicized interest groups. But this book is more than an exposé. Though Dreger is passionate about ideas and principle, she writes with a light and witty touch, and she is a gifted explainer and storyteller."
Jared Diamond, author of Guns, Germs, and Steel and The World until Yesterday:
"Alice Dreger would win a prize for this year's most gripping novel, except for one thing: her stories are true, and this isn't a novel. Instead, it's an exciting account of complicated good guys and bad guys, and the pursuit of justice."