Seed
from: Seed Media Group Llc% CSI
List Price: $29.70
Prices subject to change.
Price: $19.95
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Availability: Usually ships in 2 to 4 months
Product Description:
Seed is the groundbreaking publication that connects science and society, helping us better understand the topics in science today and how they are affecting our lives.
Like no other magazine, Seed captures the spirit of our times.
Seed is fresh, contemporary, smart, provocative, relevant, and thought-provoking. It's the new voice of science--and the kind of science magazine you've been looking for.
Seed looks at science through a cultural lens. Science as it drives what we see on network dramas and read in literature. Science as it influences politics, science as it relates to forensics, global warming, and the war on terror. Science as it drives consumer culture. Science as it determines the quality and effectiveness of our health care system. And science as it drives our conversation.
Unlike ever before, science is revolutionizing our global culture and impacting each and every one of us. Seed captures and helps shape this unique cultural shift. Seed is the first 21st-century science magazine for our 21st-century culture. Because science transcends borders, Seed covers science wherever it happens--around the globe and right next door. Indeed, Seed is the first international science magazine.
What you'll read in Seed will affect how you live. How you work. How you think about your place in the world. How you feel about issues. In Seed, you'll meet the new generation of thought leaders promoting this science-centric culture from their stations on the cutting edge of change. From bestselling author Chris Mooney to Columbia physics professor Brian Greene to Harvard theoretical physicist Lisa Randall. Seed canvasses the global science landscape for the ideas and issues that are reaching beyond the lab to affect politics, business, the arts, and current events.
Every issue is an eclectic mix that will engage you--and surprise you. Stem cells. Climate change, public health, DNA, and capital punishment.
You'll find out how a renegade group of Harvard students and professors started a scientific revolution. With the Olympics around the corner, you'll explore the mind of a fan. And you'll meet the minds driving our global science culture.
Be part of the revolutionary shift that's brought science and culture together as one. Explore science as the ever-changing force that lies beneath everything. Order your subscription to Seed today!
Seed is the groundbreaking publication that connects science and society, helping us better understand the topics in science today and how they are affecting our lives.
Like no other magazine, Seed captures the spirit of our times.
Seed is fresh, contemporary, smart, provocative, relevant, and thought-provoking. It's the new voice of science--and the kind of science magazine you've been looking for.
Seed looks at science through a cultural lens. Science as it drives what we see on network dramas and read in literature. Science as it influences politics, science as it relates to forensics, global warming, and the war on terror. Science as it drives consumer culture. Science as it determines the quality and effectiveness of our health care system. And science as it drives our conversation.
Unlike ever before, science is revolutionizing our global culture and impacting each and every one of us. Seed captures and helps shape this unique cultural shift. Seed is the first 21st-century science magazine for our 21st-century culture. Because science transcends borders, Seed covers science wherever it happens--around the globe and right next door. Indeed, Seed is the first international science magazine.
What you'll read in Seed will affect how you live. How you work. How you think about your place in the world. How you feel about issues. In Seed, you'll meet the new generation of thought leaders promoting this science-centric culture from their stations on the cutting edge of change. From bestselling author Chris Mooney to Columbia physics professor Brian Greene to Harvard theoretical physicist Lisa Randall. Seed canvasses the global science landscape for the ideas and issues that are reaching beyond the lab to affect politics, business, the arts, and current events.
Every issue is an eclectic mix that will engage you--and surprise you. Stem cells. Climate change, public health, DNA, and capital punishment.
You'll find out how a renegade group of Harvard students and professors started a scientific revolution. With the Olympics around the corner, you'll explore the mind of a fan. And you'll meet the minds driving our global science culture.
Be part of the revolutionary shift that's brought science and culture together as one. Explore science as the ever-changing force that lies beneath everything. Order your subscription to Seed today!
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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:

Rating:
- No interesting articles
Lots of glossy pictures & graphics with little text and no scientific content.The production values of Architectural Digest, the depth and content of Reader's Digest and the celebrity obsession of People magazine.I can only conclude that Seed is meant for liberal arts majors who thought that science was just "too complex".After the second issue I received I started to feel guilty about the environmental cost of printing and shipping this piece of trash.
Rating:
- Cultural Trends, Scientific Discoveries
Seed Magazine is an interesting publication that combines articles on scientific topics with the different world views and cultural phenomenon that affect the way we view scientific topics. This magazine's subtitle is Science is Culture and it combines elements of a typical science publication, like Discover, with a dose of social understanding to arrive at its general conclusions.
I have been reading Seed Magazine for about a year now and my I found many reasons to appreciate this ... Read More
Rating:
- Science & Culture Well Presented - Recommended!
"Seed" is a very interesting and enjoyable magazine, combining hard science with artistic and social elements.
Each issue has contained something of interest to my science oriented family (biology, physics, nanotech, etc) and some interesting interviews with leaders in various fields of studies.
The photos and diagrams are top notch and add to the appeal of the magazine.
Recommended for those who want to liven up the dry sciences!
Rating:
- Stunning, Unusual, and Highly Entertaining
My biggest complaint with this magazine is that it doesn't come often enough.While yes, certainly catered to a more scientifically aware, intelligent crowd, SEED by no means approaches the drudgery of a scientific journal. In each issues is even a thick, tear-out "cribsheet" on basic scientific issues or concepts from global warming and photosynthesis to string theory.
One of the defining characteristics of this magazine that make it so enjoyable is the visual content.Just as ... Read More
Rating:
- "Science is Culture"
So says the magazine's subtitle. Well, of course. Being bold enough to come out and say so is different, though, in a world where marketing is considered a creative profession and engineering isn't.
This isn't a technical journal. I get "Science" magazine and read it avidly every week, plus a drift of professional magazines and transactions. Seed is something different. It's for the geek who'd rather see a picture of a Nobel winner than of Paris Hilton. (Can you imagine meeting all 295 ... Read More
- No interesting articlesLots of glossy pictures & graphics with little text and no scientific content.The production values of Architectural Digest, the depth and content of Reader's Digest and the celebrity obsession of People magazine.I can only conclude that Seed is meant for liberal arts majors who thought that science was just "too complex".After the second issue I received I started to feel guilty about the environmental cost of printing and shipping this piece of trash.
- Cultural Trends, Scientific DiscoveriesSeed Magazine is an interesting publication that combines articles on scientific topics with the different world views and cultural phenomenon that affect the way we view scientific topics. This magazine's subtitle is Science is Culture and it combines elements of a typical science publication, like Discover, with a dose of social understanding to arrive at its general conclusions.
I have been reading Seed Magazine for about a year now and my I found many reasons to appreciate this ... Read More
- Science & Culture Well Presented - Recommended!"Seed" is a very interesting and enjoyable magazine, combining hard science with artistic and social elements.
Each issue has contained something of interest to my science oriented family (biology, physics, nanotech, etc) and some interesting interviews with leaders in various fields of studies.
The photos and diagrams are top notch and add to the appeal of the magazine.
Recommended for those who want to liven up the dry sciences!
- Stunning, Unusual, and Highly EntertainingMy biggest complaint with this magazine is that it doesn't come often enough.While yes, certainly catered to a more scientifically aware, intelligent crowd, SEED by no means approaches the drudgery of a scientific journal. In each issues is even a thick, tear-out "cribsheet" on basic scientific issues or concepts from global warming and photosynthesis to string theory.
One of the defining characteristics of this magazine that make it so enjoyable is the visual content.Just as ... Read More
- "Science is Culture"So says the magazine's subtitle. Well, of course. Being bold enough to come out and say so is different, though, in a world where marketing is considered a creative profession and engineering isn't.
This isn't a technical journal. I get "Science" magazine and read it avidly every week, plus a drift of professional magazines and transactions. Seed is something different. It's for the geek who'd rather see a picture of a Nobel winner than of Paris Hilton. (Can you imagine meeting all 295 ... Read More
