Making Miracles: The Evolution Journey of Human Understanding Through Science Experiments traces humanity's path from myth-making to methodical discovery. Beginning with thunder gods and ancient legends, it shows how early stories seeded the first sparks of rational inquiry, then follows trailblazers-from Aristotle and Ibn al-Haytham to Copernicus, Vesalius, Bacon, and Galileo-who turned curiosity into systematic experimentation.
Richer than a simple history, the narrative reveals how the printing press, the Royal Society, and daring experiments like Franklin's kite transformed isolated insights into shared knowledge, while clashes of superstition and evidence shaped public trust in science. Moving into the modern age, it tackles the ethical stakes of breakthroughs in medicine, AI, and quantum physics, asking how we can balance skepticism with wonder and responsibility with discovery.
Sweeping in scope yet intimate in detail, this book celebrates the human spirit's relentless drive to turn the miraculous into the explainable-inviting scholars, students, and curious readers alike to see science as an ongoing, profoundly human adventure.