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- illustrating and entretaining
- Parallel Worlds: A Journey Through Creation, Higher Dimensions, and the Future of the Cosmos
- Great Introduction for the layman
- It's A Possibility
- Science Fiction
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Parallel Worlds: A Journey Through Creation, Higher Dimensions, and the Future of the Cosmos
Michio Kaku
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ASIN: 1400033721
Release Date: 2006-02-14 |
Book Description
In this thrilling journey into the mysteries of our cosmos, bestselling author Michio Kaku takes us on a dizzying ride to explore black holes and time machines, multidimensional space and, most tantalizing of all, the possibility that parallel universes may lay alongside our own.
Kaku skillfully guides us through the latest innovations in string theory and its latest iteration, M-theory, which posits that our universe may be just one in an endless multiverse, a singular bubble floating in a sea of infinite bubble universes. If M-theory is proven correct, we may perhaps finally find answer to the question, “What happened before the big bang?” This is an exciting and unforgettable introduction into the new cutting-edge theories of physics and cosmology from one of the pre-eminent voices in the field.
Customer Reviews:
illustrating and entretaining.......2007-08-23
The book gives a understandable review for the curious layman of the exciting ideas in cosmology and correlated areas , like string theory
it is spiced with personal details about the scientist involved
All over it is a exciting expirience and a highly recomended book
Parallel Worlds: A Journey Through Creation, Higher Dimensions, and the Future of the Cosmos.......2007-08-16
This book is actually to be a Christmas gift, so I haven't opened it. It arrived very quickly and in good condition. Thank you for expediting it.
Great Introduction for the layman.......2007-08-12
I truly enjoyed this book. It covers very profound subjects in a manner that the average layman can understand. With this book, I had to read it in small bites. Each page was packed to thought provoking ideas. After reading a little, I wanted to just sit, think and reflect. It is good book to read with others. The ideas need to be discussed to be absorbed.
I enjoyed the cosmology, the string theory, M-theory, and the standard model. I had heard about them but I never knew much about them. The author lets you know which areas are hotly debated in the science world. Most books about this subject have too much math for me to work through.
The ending was a little too much.
It's A Possibility.......2007-08-02
Michio Kaku has created a scenario of possibilities in the evolution of this world. Kaku explores the potentials of parallel worlds and realities. In quantum physics anything is possible. Kudos for Kaku. Bettye Johnson, award-winning author, Secrets of the Magdalene Scrolls.
Science Fiction.......2007-07-11
Kaku has an agreeable, engaging writing style that makes some of the more challenging physics and mathematics accessbile to the layman. Where I felt my interest waning, however, was in the section where he discusses at considerable length various exit strategies from the universe trillions of years from now when it will come to an end. A page (at most) would have sufficed to cover this scenario; instead he went on and on about the various possibilities for intelligent beings to escape from our universe into parallel worlds. The death of our universe is too distant an event for us to be expending too much brain power now on devising contingency plans.
Amazon.com
The Mathematical Universe is a solid collection of short essays, with each addressing a particular mathematical topic. Titles range from "Isoperimetric Problem" to "Where Are the Women?" Author Dunham is unafraid to refer to diagrams, equations, and rigorous arguments throughout the book, yet he manages to maintain a conversational tone.
Book Description
"Dunham writes for nonspecialists, and they will enjoy his piquant anecdotes and amusing asides â Booklist
"Artfully, Dunham conducts a tour of the mathematical universe. . . he believes these ideas to be accessible to the audience he wants to reach, and he writes so that they are." â Nature
"If you want to encourage anyone's interest in math, get them The Mathematical Universe."
Customer Reviews:
Fun, easy read for those with some college/high school calculus.......2007-07-24
This was a very fun read! It brings you through 2000+ years of mathematics and demonstrates some brilliant mathematical reasoning, e.g. Archimedes, Euler, etc... The chapters are broken up into very small and digestable sizes. Dunham did a great job! Buy now and have fun!
Sloppy Research--Who Can Trust this Information?.......2007-02-08
I really enjoy this book, and I keep consulting it. But I really don't know whether what I'm learning from it is correct or not. Here's the problem: The two entries with which I have the most familiarity are just plain wrong.
The entry on the "Russell Paradox" reads like a hagiography of Bertrand Russell. It makes it appear that Russell ceased working on the Principia Mathematica because he could not find a solution to his paradox--whether a set, all of whose members are not members of themselves, contains itself. According to Dunham, his inability to find a satisfactory solution spelled the end of his quest for the development of a logical foundation for mathematics, which he communicated to Frege, who gave up on his attempts as well. This is pure fiction. The entire Principia Mathematica is based on Russell's theory of ramified types (the stipulation that a set cannot be a member of itself), which he confidently asserted as being the solution to the paradox throughout the work. What put an end to Russell and Whitehead's project, as well as Frege's, was Goedel's incompleteness theorem, totally ignored by Dunham.
Dunham's treatment of Venn diagrams is even worse because it is deprecating of John Venn and his work--and totally wrong. Dunham states that the diagrams that are named after him were Venn's only contribution to mathematics and then makes disparaging remarks about them, particularly that they lacked any originality. Here's the reality: John Venn was an extremely competent mathematician/logician whose many contributions included the furtherance of George Boole's innovations. Dunham's picture of a Venn diagram--a rectangle with two large circles that do not overlap and a small circle completely inside of one of the large ones--is absolutely wrong and misses the genius of Venn's contribution. Dunham is right that other mathematicians, e.g. Euler, had drawn diagrams such as the one he pictures, but those are not what Venn did. The point of Venn's diagrams is that they reflect the Boolean understanding of the hypothetical nature of a universal statement. Thus a statement like "All frogs are amphibians," is drawn with two overlapping circles, and the area that represents frogs outside of the "amphibian" circle is shaded out, meaning we know it is not populated, but leaving it open whether there is a population in the overlap area. This technique makes a huge difference in the understanding of logical relationships; it is a revolution after some two thousand years of Aristotelian assumptions. Dunham can do no better than belittle it.
Thus, I come back to my original thought. These are two entries in the area with which I am familiar, and they are both just plain wrong. How much credence can I give the other entries when I try to learn from them?
Enjoyable for dipping.......2006-12-15
I really enjoyed "Journey Though Genius", so was looking forward to peeling the cover off this book, however i was a little disappointed to find repeated text from the earlier book. That Ramanujan is missing is surprising (only mentioned in a passing reference to discuss gender imbalance). It would have been nice to have heard a little about this mathematical phenomenum, even if to just discuss the number 1729, if his theorems were deemed to difficult for a general audience. For these 2 points it looses a star.
Dunham utilizes his gift for giving clear expositions in an entertaining and engaging manner. Another good read.
Outstanding book!.......2006-01-19
I am not a math or science wizard, but study both for recreation and fun. I did not have good maths profs in college and if I had had this book I would have been more successful. It reads easily and the math is presented extremely well and is very understandable. The author interweaves many snippets of personal and historical information and thus the book becomes a marriage of math and history in the best way possible. I have taken this book out many times to read and reread chapters. Yes, it's one of those. Buy it. No matter what your interests or educational level this will be one of those books you keep close and know where it is all the time.
Excellent.......2003-10-11
Excellent book that gives us a synopsis of the history of maths from early days. The only criticism I found (and no doubt other readers and the author) is that by virtue of the title, we are limited to one piece as per each letter of the alphabet. I personally would have liked to see the Z chapter written on Zero.
That apart, quite an entertaining read and highly recommended. Dunham should write some more.
Book Description
Astonishing facts, amazing truths, incredible calclations, and mind-bending theories about the biggest subject of all: the past. present, and future Universe.
When the Universe began, it was smaller than a grain of sand, smaller than the point of a needle, smaller than a cell of your body. Nothing in our daily experience prepares us for such an astronishing fact, yet physicists readily accept this concept as part of the Big Bang theory of the origins of the Universe.
Book Description
For nearly forty years, Chet Raymo has walked a one-mile path from his house in North Easton, Massachusetts, to the Stonehill College campus where he has taught physics and astronomy. The woods, meadows, and stream he passes are as familiar to him as his own backyard, yet each day he finds something new. "Every pebble and wildflower has a story to tell," Raymo says.
In The Path, Raymo chronicles the universe he has found by closely observing every detail of his route. He connects the local to the global, the microscopic to the galactic, with a scientists's curiosity, a historian's respect for the past, a child's capacity for wonder. With each step, the landscape he traverses becomes richer and more multidimensional, opening door after door into astromnomy, geology, biology, history, and literaure.
"The flake of granite in the path was once at the core of towering mountains pushed up across New England when continents collided," he writes. "The purple loosestrife beside the stream emigrated from Europe in the 1800s as a garden ornamental, then went wantonly native in a land of wild frontiers. The light from the star Arcturus I see reflected in the brook beneath the bridge at night has been traveling across space for forty years before entering my eye. I have attended to all of these stories and tried to hear what the landscape has to say .... I have attended, too, to language. How did the wood anemone and Sheep Pasture get their names? What does the queset of Queset Brook signify in the language of Native Americans? Scratch a name in a landscape, and history bubbles up like a spring."
The path also reveals the stories of nineteenth-century industrialists who transformed natural resources into power, and turn-of-the-century landscape architects, such as Frederick Law Olmsted, who championed an ideal of nature tamed by conscious intent. In its transformations over the centuries, Raymo writes, the path "encapsulates in many surprising ways the history of our nation and of our fickle love affair with the natural world."
Recognizing that his path is commonplace, and that we all have such routes in our lives, Raymo urges us to walk attentively, stopping often to watch and listen with care. His wisdom and insights inspire us to turn local paths-- whether through cities, suburbs, or rural areas-- into doorways to greater understanding of nature and history.
Customer Reviews:
The miracles lie in the detail.......2005-07-23
For 37 years now Mr Reymo is walking the same one-mile path between his house in North Easton, near Boston, and his workplace, the Stonehill College, back and forth, nearly everyday. And he uses precisely this short path as starting point to his exploration of the miracles of Nature.
First he emphasizes on things he notices along his way (like the river, the forest, the rocky ground, animals, fossils, and so on) to make you aware of the all-abounding, but often overlooked, wonders that surround you. And then he gives scientific, but very readable, explanations of why these things are they way they are or where they came from. His elaborations cover multiple themes like biology, botany, astronomy and anthropology. To only name a few.
But what makes this book so intriguing is especially the fact that he focuses on little, simple, everyday things and then shows how they fit in the greater frame. It makes you curious and want to just start exploring your own backyard. And you will definitely see it with other eyes!
A Beautiful Walk Through Life With Prof. Raymo!.......2005-05-05
Chet Raymo, a physics and astronomy professor at Stonehill College, poetically and lyrically takes us on a "stroll" with him while he walks from his home in North Easton, Massachusetts to the college campus. He has walked this path for 37 years and by careful observation of the forested landscape, he has garnered an eternities worth of insights. One is immediately reminded or the keen observations and musings of Henry David Thoreau and John Muir, et al. "The Path" is written in an uncomplicated, approachable style for all audiences, and yet deep with wisdom and knowledge producing a broad spectrum view of the workings of the world.
And from Raymo's musings, we see the history of the Stonehill region come to life and how it has shaped the lives of generations of people, the flora/fauna and the "natural" landscape with special attention to the early entrepreneurs who most influenced the region, their motivations of nation building, personal wealth and the current display of their legacies.
We get an over-view of geologic transformations, biological processes, and the building blocks of all physical manifestations through the coding of DNA strands. The interconnectedness of all life and our tinkering with nature resulting in such side-effects and backlashes as global warming and broken down natural resource distribution cycles.
From the wintertime stroll, we get observations of: "The tiny six-pointed snowflake is, on a deeper level, a buzzing hive of molecular vibrations. And so, too, the lush diversity of life in the water meadow, examined more closely, resolves itself into a fandango of dancing molecules. The seen is a mask for the unseen. Our eyes open at birth to a flood of photons, but we must learn to see." (p. 146)
The careful observations of nature in action through all four seasons from a stroll on this path creates a summation of our evolving human relation to life on the planet in such thoughts as: "Knowledge once gained cannot be unlearned, and knowledge is power. For better or worse, the future of the planet has been handed to us, not by a deity but by fate. Stewardship of other creature is in our hands." "...an understanding of the ecological wholeness of the Earth suggest that our altruism should extend to other creatures, too: plants, animals, even microbes." And, "Environmental conservation-clean water and air, a steady climate- is in the interest of our species." (p. 171)
This is a beautiful melding of the thoughts and observations of such greats as the sociobiologist, E. O. Wilson, "The Future of Life", Thomas Berry, "The Dream of the Earth", et al. who are all in unison with the profound need for humanity to seriously embrace an ethic of life stewardship for the survival of our beautiful blue planet Earth. Thank you again, Prof. Chet Raymo!
Philosophy and Evolution.......2005-03-05
This book is a poor attempt at proving evolution. While I don't believe in evoltion but do believe in natural selection, I could still give a better argument for evolution than Mr. Raymo provides. Even though I had to endure the little evolutionary stabs he throws in to the mix here and there I did enjoy the history and the way he describes the beauty of nature.
pleasant stroll describes the read as well as subject.......2004-10-13
The Path is exactly what the title says it is, a one-mile walk which lends Raymo the small details of life and the world (monarch butterflies, a minor brook, blooming loosestrife) so that he may expand on them to larger, grander issues: the birth of the universe and our world, global warming, the impact of technology, etc. Both the stroll and the read are "pleasant" --short little jaunts that will seem at least somewhat familiar to many, especially those who would tend toward a book of this sort especially. The mini-essays on these larger issues dip in and out, offering the reader just enough information to keep them interested and while sometimes the brevity seems perfect, at others it comes across as a bit superficial. Raymo keeps the book grounded in the literalness of his walk and also in the local history, which though certainly less important and obviously more proscribed than the universe as a whole, at times is actually more interesting. Overall, Raymo keeps a nice balance on the three-legged stool of his physical walk along the path, his historical walk through the village's past, and his rational stroll through the science of nitrogen-fixing and star formation. Overlaying all three, permeating the entire work, is a spirituality that is warm, familiar, conversational, rarely didactic, often passionate, and always sincere. While the book was interesting and well-written throughout, I thought the writing ticked up in the last quarter or so to a more poetic, lyric style that was a true pleasure to read. Overall, the book is a good intro to the topics, its local history nicely balances the grander view, and if it reads a bit superficially or disjointed at times, those flaws don't outweigh the positives. It isn't a great book by any stretch, nor does it aspire to it. It is just as it's advertised, a pleasant stroll that now and then catches you by surprise in a moment of joyful appreciation. Recommended.
A path from the particular to the universal.......2004-08-14
At the end of the last chapter (before the epilogue) Raymo writes that the "ideal of humans living in harmony with tamed nature ... is a sturdy old myth, and in it we might still hope to combine the Enlightenment, with its confidence in the power of the human mind to make sense of the world, and romanticism, with its belief that all of life is a miracle."
That neatly sums up the main themes of this book, that describes the author's daily walk through the woods to work. The author wanders the path and all the thoughts and associations it provokes, seeking both ends: to make sense of the world, and to celebrate that life is a miracle.
The book does indeed wander. Under T in the index (unusual to find such a good index in a small book), for example, you can find Tao (Way); Technology; Thales of Miletus; Third World; Thoreau, Henry David; Thousand-monkey metaphor; Tibetan Plateau; Timber, harvesting; ...
In part they are connected by Raymo's story of how everything _is_ connected, and how in the particular we can find the universal. That is what he shows as he wanders the path from start to end. He starts with the particular - the names of streets, local history - and ranges in his genial, learned way - through the amazing journey of monarch butterflies, the DNA that shapes and is shaped by life - to the universal - the laws of nature, the mystery that so much is explicable, yet not entirely.
That is where the story touches on its deeper themes. Though he quotes Oscar Wilde, that "the true mystery of the world is the visible, not the invisible," he warns that "our senses are dulled by the tedium of the commonplace" and tries to remind us, and show us, vividly "that the ordinary is not ordinary at all, that the commonplace is miraculous."
Then The Path is at its best (and best read, not reviewed).
Customer Reviews:
Pure Poetry.......1999-07-31
I can't even begin to describe the affect this book has had on my way of thinking in regards to the universe we live in and my own mortality. Before I read this book(a billion times)I was always interested in the universe and what was out there. A co-worker heard of my interest and bought me this book as a Christmas present. I thought, "wow. pretty cool". But in no way was I ready for the abundance if information placed at my disposal by this book. I'm just in awe when I read it. The author really does seem to have passion about our universe and it showed in the writing. The descriptions and hypotheticals are so vivid. You don't have to be some genious to understand what this book is telling you but it doesn't come of as "kiddy" either. To me that is what makes it so wonderful. It gives you the feeling that someone has actually traveled to the ends of the universe and their just telling you what it was like. Even the chapter on Earth is suprisingly very interesting. It gave me a new appreciation(and fear) for this planet. So calm and unassuming in comparison to other planets. But so powerful to all it's inhabitants. "Before our universe existed, there was no past, present, or future. Space did not exist, nor did vacuum. There was nothing-even dark cannot exist without light". wow
Breathtaking!.......1999-05-24
This book was, simply put, breathtaking. I don't know why someone would wish to sabotage the overall rating by giving this masterpiece one star...but clearly they were not reading the same book I was. To each their own. I found the facts within the book quite accurate myself....having read more than one hundred books of its kind and finding no inconsistencies. The pictures within the book itself were magnificent and well placed throughout the book. The text itself was also very informative and showed that the author was very well versed in the ways of the cosmos...both theoretically and factually. I highly recommend this book to anyone with interest in our cosmos. You won't be dissapointed.
Very little to do with the Hubble.......1999-04-21
This book actually shows very little understanding of the work done by Hubble or its relationship to other NASA missions. Many of the pictures attributed to the Hubble come from other missions; further, more than one artist's rendition is given as a Hubble image.
great book.......1999-02-03
great pictures and text, a most have i give it a 5 out of
great book.......1999-01-30
great text and pictures, everything is perfect, and in the book the speed of light is typed as 186,000 m.p.h. or something, it is listed many times.
Product Description
Scientist, Harvard professor, and science fiction buff, Sheldon L. Glashow shared the 1979 Nobel Prize in Physics for his discovery of charm and quarks. Now, in this funny and fascinating autobiography/science primer, he introduces the average reader to the incredible world of subatomic physics, a world of gamma rays, Einstein, neutrinos, Neils Bohr, positrons, Z-bosons - and describes his journey from a childhood lab to the pinnacle of the scientific community. As riveting as any detective story, Interactions describes a hunt for knowledge and hidden truths that spans three decades and four continents, that leads from New York City to the back streets of Istanbul and behind the scenes of the Nobel Prize ceremony in Stockholm. Here are the world's most brilliant men and women at play and at work, the friendships, rivalries, competing theories - and, above all, one man's relentless quest to discover and make clear the very fabric of our universe.
Book Description
The word truth presupposes that there are unchanging facts and laws. Are there such things or are there valid, differing truths for each person or belief system? Take a look at your newspaper, the television programs you watch or the books you read. How do you know what they say is true? What is real and what is fraudulent? Are those conclusions by authorities as concrete as they sound? Which arguments are hiding illogical or irrational ideas? The public education system rarely teaches people how to think logically or reason through a problem. How many people do you know believe something to be true, yet cannot explain why they accept it as truth? We all have a worldview which is our belief system that governs all aspects of our lives or is the Âglasses that we perceive the world through. How do these worldviews affect our perception on what is true? Which worldviews are rooted in fact? Explore how to find truth by first establishing the tools of critical thought. Then subjects that range from history to science to religion will be put to the test. Reason is only the beginning, not the end.
Customer Reviews:
What a Shameful Sham.......2006-02-26
How can you take seriously a book that cites Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves as revisionist history? The first two chapters are a sparse, 12-page description of what the author claims is critical thinking. This is followed by a tour through history, science and religion. What becomes more and more obvious as you read is the entire enterprise is a thinly disguised arguement for Creationism, the Anthropic Principle, Intelligent Design, and Christian Theology. The author concludes with the claim that Christian theism does not violate the rules of Science.
I was so hoping to find a book that actually dealt with Critical Thinking. I am still hoping.
An excellent, concise Introduction to Critical Thinking.......2004-01-09
The intro and first two chapters serve as a handy guide that the readers can constantly refer to, even after finishing the book. Then the book applies critical thinking to a wide variety of topics, including history, environmentalism and religion.
At @ 200 pages the book is concise, written at an accessible level. Much of the book focuses on science issues, especially science vs. religion. Gets to the foundation and basics of the evolution, creation and intelligent design debates. Has concise looks at the flaws of naturalism and young-earthism.
A couple useful appendices add some additional info and the notes are full of sources where people can turn for more detail on the subjects that interest them.
This is one of the best of its type: Concise, accurate, readable and logical. No atheist evangelism like Shermer or Sagan. No cryptic rules and technical treatises like you find in textbooks or many supposedly-lay reader books on critical thought.
A few preliminary comments.......2003-11-01
This book was only just recommended to me, so I haven't gotten into it very far, but I am eager to see if it lives up to its title, which is amazingly ambitious. I am hoping it will discuss these topics on a fairly rigorous level, and not turn out to be some lightweight, quasi-philosophical nonsense like a lot of what's out there. If it does, I'll revise my review here accordingly. I give it four stars here for the benefit of the doubt, and because the author's heart (or mind) is in the right place.
I am dubious though, although I can recommend Michael Shermer's book on the subject. He has a Ph.D. in philosophy and is the editor of The Sceptical Enquirer magazine. I don't know if this author has similar credentials but I will find out shortly.
Speaking for myself, however, the concept of "truth" hasn't fared very well in human hands except in math and logic, where proofs are of course true if they're valid. Everything else is technically suspect, even in the hard sciences, although I don't expect physical and chemical laws such as the law of gravity to be repealed anytime soon. :-) But such laws are still based on empirical evidence that can be explained by a mathematical theory rather than logical proof in the mathematical sense. We believe such theories are "true" for several reasons, but perhaps the most important is because they can make previously unknown predictions about the real world that can also be shown to be correct--and that we wouldn't have known otherwise. But again, technically theories aren't true; they're simply valid explanations of the empirical evidence that have received considerable experimental confirmation.
For those of you well-read in the philosophy of science you will recognize the influence of Karl Popper's falsifiability criterion here, which is that nothing in science ever gets proved--things are only disproved by further experiment-- producing a science that gets at the "truth" by means of successively greater approximations to 'reality' (whatever that is). :-)
And as for areas like typical journalism and paranormal phenomena, rigorous notions of the "truth" have already gone way downhill by the time we get to those areas. And even in analytical philosophy the theory of truth hasn't done well, and all the proposals I know of have failed--for example, the correspondance theory of truth--which failed because the theory's idea of facts being true propositional statements linked to a real world observable worked well for true statements but not for statements that were false to fact.
Anyway, just a few comments on the checkered history of ideas about the truth, and which gives you some idea of how I'd like to see the subject treated. After I've read this book, as I said, I'll redo this review in the light of this new information--assuming it's worth it.
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