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The Fabric of the Cosmos : Space, Time, and the Texture of Reality (Vintage) :: 0375727205
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| As a boy, Brian Greene read Albert Camus' The Myth of Sisyphus and was transformed. Camus, in Greene's paraphrase, insisted that the hero triumphs "by relinquishing everything beyond immediate experience." After wrestling with this idea, however, Greene rejected Camus and realized that his true idols were physicists; scientists who struggled "to assess life and to experience the universe at all possible levels, not just those that happened to be accessible to our frail human senses." His driving question in The Fabric of the Cosmos, then, is fundamental: "What is reality?" Over sixteen chapters, he traces the evolving human understanding of the substrate of the universe, from classical physics to ten-dimensional M-Theory. Assuming an audience of non-specialists, Greene has set himself a daunting task: to explain non-intuitive, mathematical concepts like String Theory, the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, and Inflationary Cosmology with analogies drawn from common experience. For the most part, he succeeds. His language reflects a deep passion for science and a gift for translating concepts into poetic images. When explaining, for example, the inability to see the higher dimensions inherent in string theory, Greene writes: "We don't see them because of the way we see
like an ant walking along a lily pad
we could be floating within a grand, expansive, higher-dimensional space." For Greene, Rhodes Scholar and professor of physics and mathematics at Columbia University, speculative science is not always as thorough and successful. His discussion of teleportation, for example, introduces and then quickly tables a valuable philosophical probing of identity. The paradoxes of time travel, however, are treated with greater depth, and his vision of life in a three-brane universe is compelling and--to use his description for quantum reality--"weird." In the final pages Greene turns from science fiction back to the fringes of science fact, and he returns with rigor to frame discoveries likely to be made in the coming decades. "We are, most definitely, still wandering in the jungle," he concludes. Thanks to Greene, though, some of the underbrush has been cleared. --Patrick O'Kelley Editorial Descriptions are usually submitted by the manufacturers, publishers and authors. Contact us if you are one of them, and wish to change the above description. |
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Author: Guest Greene's "The Elegant Universe" is a well-written, interesting re-telling of the whole of physics. It is one of my favorite all-time popular science books. Thus I find it difficult to understand how the author could have followed up with "The Fabric of the Cosmos". Perhaps this book is more approachable, but by watering it down he has brought this book down into the world of many, many other popular physics books. 2 Stars may be a little harsh, but Greene should be rated on his potential in the hopes that he will do better with his next book.
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Author: Guest If you want one book that spans most of current leading edge thinking in physics and cosmology written in an elegant and accessible style this is it. The other thing I liked about this book is the parallels with eastern mysticism and the concept of the limitations our sensory experiences may im pose on our capacity to understand the world around us.
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Author: Guest Brian Greene has done it again. This book does a fantastic job describing the state of modern physics, specifically as it relates to cosmology in an easy to read manner. Greene goes on to explain the basics of string theory and how it can be used to explain cosmology. Some topics covered in Elegant Universe are covered here, but I never felt like I was reading the same book twice.
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Author: Guest Unraveling the Greatest Mystery of All
Cosmologists are left to piece together the beginnings and workings of the universe from fourteen- billion year old clues. The author points out that between the two important ideas of, "atoms" and "symmetry" , have lead to maybe the beginnings of a "Unified Theory of Everything". Between these ideas and physical clues, scientists are making progress, and can infer conditions within the early Universe, the shape of the Universe and even the direction it is evolving. In the beginning chapters, it discusses that if all motion is relative, why does a whirlpool of water form a concave surface which really identifies it as the moving object. Why does matter have the property of inertia? Is it the result of the Higgs Ocean? What mechanism imparts a direction to time and disorder within the Universe? This reader felt the author was genuinely concerned about leading readers of all levels to the answer, sometimes with exasperatingly small baby steps. Although this reader could actually pinpoint the step where the reasoning became too complicated, I felt I never made such progress before in this area. Simple statements like, the reason Einstein felt that time dilated in his theory of Relativity is, if the speed of light is a Universal constant and the distance is the same, the only thing left is that time must change, I never heard it put so elegantly. The author offers a very good and long explanation of the particle v.s. wave controversy, the theory of intertwined particles, where simultaneous effects on both particles take place faster than light could ever communicate the effect. The book explains that Time has a direction, and why. This book offers perhaps the best explanations, analogies and illustrations of time slicing, excellent explanations of string theory, multi-dimensional universes, in short, after a multitude of space-time books, I feel most authors were parroting explanations of phenomena, with this book I feel like I gained a rung or two on the ladder of understanding. Perhaps other readers will do better, but I believe this book contains some of the best explanations of any book dealing with quantum, relativity, parallel universes, string theory and the search for the ultimate theory. The reader will gain a sense that this branch of science full of handwaving physicists theorizing of what might have been is actually making progress. I was fortunate to have read Steven Wienberg's "The First Three Minutes before tackling this book and I found it beneficial as an intro to this book.
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Author: Guest Greene did an excellent job with this book; he explained a plethora of deep-level physics concepts in ordinary language, without confusing his readers with high level math (though you can check the notes if that's your thing). I found some parts really intriguing and mind-blowing, others too repetitive and too focused on details. If this is one of your first physics reads, take your time. it isn't exactly your tuck-in-the-covers-right-before-sleep read, but some of the references to popular culture might give you a giggle.
This book is readable for all ages, including 17-year-old high school students like myself.
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