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The Fabric of the Cosmos
Book

The Fabric of the Cosmos

Space, Time, and the Texture of Reality

Vintage Books, 2005 more...


Editorial Rating

10

Qualities

  • Innovative

Recommendation

getAbstract.com highly recommends this excellent introduction to theoretical physics, which is accessible to any determined reader, even those with no mathematical and little scientific background. Pulitzer Prize-winning author Brian Greene is scrupulous about clarity, and has a gift for metaphor that makes it possible for him to discuss even the most abstruse, esoteric physics with skill, clarity and wit. Readers will discover baffling wonders that flatly contradict ordinary quotidian experience, and will come to realize that what they perceive as real is anything but real. Moreover, they will learn that physicists seem to have a great deal more success at demonstrating what is not real than at discovering what is. The most commonplace things - the difference between yesterday and tomorrow, between here and there - continue to baffle the greatest minds in science. Now you can begin to understand why.

Take-Aways

  • What we perceive is not real.
  • Space is not absolute and neither is time. Both are contingent and relative.
  • The past is not gone and the future is not still to come. Both are as real as the present. The past, present and future all exist permanently in spacetime.

About the Author

Brian Greene is a professor of physics and mathematics at Columbia University and author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Elegant Universe.


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    C. P. 6 years ago
    It is always surprising to me how theoretical physics can explain real life observations with such concepts which are difficult to grasp from our daily life experiences. It almost seem to be a question of faith...
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    G. T. 10 years ago
    Decent summary of key conclusions. But the important part is how we get to those conclusions - the derivations are what explain how these conclusions are important and useful. So, kind of just whet my appetite to read the whole book.
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    K. H. 1 decade ago
    A great introduction to Greene's work. The book is worth the effort to read - a must for anyone interested in theoretical physics, or just has questions about how the universe works.