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Intro
Preface
Acknowledgments
Thanks to
Contents
Part I Energy
1 From Aristotle to Nuclear Fusion: The Long Road to Understanding What Energy Actually Is
1.1 In the Beginning Was the Force
1.2 The Impulse and the Ars Viva
1.3 The Great Energy Confusion
1.4 Steam Engines as a Driver for Basic Research
1.5 The Limits of Energy Conversion
1.6 Maximum Energy in the Smallest Space
1.7 Energy and Life
1.8 How We Measure Energy
1.9 Energy on a Global Scale
Annex 1: Energy in Various Guises
References
2 The Foundation of Civilisation

2.1 Energy Cycle on Our Own Behalf
2.2 Fire, Wind, and Water
2.3 The Demand for Energy Keeps Growing
2.4 No Oil from the Socket
2.5 The Biggest Lever
2.6 The Future of Energy, the Energy of the Future
2.7 Moving Away from Fossil Fuels
3 The Comeback of Sustainable Energy: Why Fossil Energy Sources Are Only a Footnote in Human History
3.1 In the Beginning There Was Fire
3.2 The Material of the First Industrialisation
3.3 Entry into the Fossil Age
3.4 Electricity for All
3.5 The Black Gold
3.6 The End of the Golden Age of Oil

3.7 Rise and Fall of Nuclear Energy
3.8 Sustainable Energy Sources Are Returning
4 Electricity Wars and Smart Grids: The Key Role of Electricity Storage and Transport
4.1 The Issue with the Current
4.2 The Saliva of Mr. Volta
4.3 The Search for the Best Combination
4.4 An Old War Technology in a New Guise
4.5 The Coal of the Future
4.6 The Electricity War Between Edison and Westinghouse
4.7 The Return of the Direct Current
4.8 Juggling in Smart Grids
References
Part II Climate
5 A Brief History of the Climate: What Makes Current Global Warming so Special

5.1 Hot Plates and Black Stones
5.2 The Earth in Balance
5.3 The Natural and the Unnatural Greenhouse Effect
5.4 The Changing Fever of the Earth
5.5 Temporary Malfunctions
5.6 A Steamroller that Picks Up Speed
6 The Beat of the butterfly's Wings: How Climate Research and Climate Models Work
6.1 Falling Leaves in Autumn
6.2 Tamed Chaos
6.3 Caught Red-Handed
Reference
7 Risk Ethics and Integrity: Why the Competence of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Forces Us to Act
7.1 Global Issues, Global Research

7.2 Future Scenarios for the Climate and Our Society
7.3 The Influence of Politics
7.4 What We Know ...
7.5 Too Careful or Not Careful Enough?
7.6 Unpredictable Risks
7.7 Integrity
References
8 Climate Deniers, Climate Hysterics, and Nimbys: In the Self-service Shop of Arguments
8.1 1st Group: The Experts-Controversies Lead to Insight
8.2 2nd Group: Conservative Believers-The Belief in Higher Powers Than Science
8.3 3rd Group: Ideologists-The Fatal Stubbornness of Populists
8.4 4th Group: Lobbyists-The Great Fear of Reorientation

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