The Science of Rick and Morty: What Earths Stupidest Show Can Teach Us About Quantum Physics, Biological Hacking and Everything Else In Our Universe (An Unofficial Guide)
By (Author) Matt Brady
Bonnier Books Ltd
BLINK Publishing
1st May 2019
18th April 2019
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
500
Paperback
336
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 24mm
407g
What is concentrated Dark Matter
Can idiot brainwaves disguise genius ones
Are you living in a simulation operating at 5% capacity
Rick and Morty may seem like the most idiotic show on TV today, but few know that a lot of its crazy adventures are based on real-life theories and cutting-edge research.
Using the biology, chemistry and physics of the series, expert science writer Matt Brady explains the biggest questions occupying the greatest minds today, including: can we hack memory, will we ever be able to alter our basic intelligence, how far will we be able to go with cloning, could we travel to parallel universes, what energy could you get from a microverse battery and can you control a cockroach's nervous system with your tongue.
So, become less Morty and more Rick with this wander through the portal of modern-day science.
Or just go back to laughing at the stupid jokes.
Matt Brady teaches International Baccalaureate level Physics 1 and 2, Honors Chemistry and Honors Physics. Prior to teaching, Brady co-founded and was Editor-in-Chief of Newsarama.com, which became the internet's largest and most respected pop culture website, winning the first Eisner Award for Best Comics-related Journalism. Along with his wife, Brady then founded TheScienceOf.org, a website that uses pop culture as a hook to teach science to the world. He has written articles about Black Panther's vibranium, Ant-Man's arrow ride in Civil War and how much The Flash would have to eat to stay alive. Last spring, Brady was honored with the Pop Culture Educator of the Year by Pop Culture Classroom, a leading organization advocating the use of comics and pop culture in all education. He continues to try to teach the world about science.