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The Infinite Book: A Short Guide to the Boundless, Timeless and Endless

The Infinite Book: A Short Guide to the Boundless, Timeless and Endless
By John D. Barrow

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Product Description

Infinity is surely the strangest idea that humans have ever thought. Where did it come from and what is it telling us about our Universe? Can there actually be infinities? Or is infinity just a label for something that is never reached, no matter how long you go on counting? Are infinities like numbers, with some bigger than others, and one infinity at the top, bigger than all the rest? Can you do an infinite number of things in a finite amount of time? Is the Universe infinite? Is it infinitely old and will it continue to exist forever? Is matter infinitely divisible into ever-smaller pieces? But infinity is also the place where things happen that don't. All manner of strange paradoxes and fantasies characterise an infinite universe. If our Universe is infinite then an infinite number of exact copies of you are, at this very moment, reading an identical sentence on an identical planet somewhere else in the Universe. So what is it like to live in a Universe where nothing is original, where you can live forever, where anything that can be done, is done, over and over again? These are some of the deep questions that the idea of the infinite pushes us to ask. Throughout history, the infinite has been a dangerous idea. Many have lost their lives, their careers, or their freedom for talking about it. "The Infinite Book" will take you on a tour of these dangerous questions and the strange answers that scientists, mathematicians, philosophers, and theologians have come up with to deal with its threats to our sanity.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #88195 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-11-03
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 256 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
"Praise for The Book of Nothing: 'Barrow explains nothing with great clarity, a lovely lightness of touch and enormous erudition. He has written an eligible bachelor of a book - witty, suave, rich and immensely learned.' Spectator. Praise for Theories of Everything: 'An exhilarating journey that cuts across a vast terrain of conceptuall and marks: from physics to metaphysics, mathematics to philosophy, and from mythology to theology.' New Scientist. Praise for Impossibility: 'For as good an account as you're going to get of where science stops, read this book.' Nature"

From the Publisher
Everything you might want to know about infinity - in history and all the way to today's cutting-edge science.

About the Author
John D. Barrow is Research Professor of Mathematical Sciences in the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics at the University of Cambridge. He is the author of several best-selling books, including Theories of Everything, Impossibility, and The Book of Nothing.


Customer Reviews

Has its limits4
"Well," I said to myself, as I picked up The Infinite Book for a bargain, finite sum of money, "this ought to last a while".

There are a number of playful paradoxes on the theme of "infinite" books, and indeed Barrow mentions one of them in a chapter of his own "Infinite Book", a short story by Borges, in which a man finds a book with an infinite number of pages, which means that absolutely all knowledge, both true and false, is contained within it ... the answer to everything is always there, somewhere, but once you've lost your page the chances of ever finding it again are mathematically nil. However, this "Infinite Book" reminded me of a different sort of imaginary "infinite book" - a mathematical paradox, in which every successive page of a book is half the thickness of the previous one, so when you flip the book over to look at the last page, the last page doesn't exist.

Just like this latter "infinite book", it seemed to me that the content of "The Infinite Book" started out in the early pages as challenging, hefty, engaging - and then starts to become more flimsy and insubstantial as it goes on. It's as if the author started out with a terrific idea for a book (and the early chapters, about Cantor's infinities and the heresy of infinity, make for engrossing reading) but then ran out of ideas and had to pad it out to book length with in some places, frankly daft chapters about Infinite Machines and Living Forever. Increasingly the reader is asked to accept statements that challenge not only one's intuition but also the foregoing text, unless of course the current theory is truly so esoteric that it doesn't make sense to the ordinary brain. For instance, computers, we are told, have doubled in power every couple of years or so on average since about 1900 "which has led some people to speculate that eventually there may be machines capable of performing an infinite number of calculations." Oh, right, okay, says the reader, and when's that going to happen? No answer is given us here. Elsewhere in his book, Barrow tells us that the existence of an infinite number of universes, apparently, "implies" that everything exists and is infinitely repeated. It's hard to see why, though, since we have already been introduced to the idea that the number "1" for instance, is never, ever, repeated again in the infinitely long series of whole numbers. Perhaps universes are counted as a different order of infinity. But it isn't clear. Another thing which slightly jarred was that, even though the existence of Infinity is still (the author tells us) a matter of philosophical speculation among mathematicians, the philosophy in this book seems to be pitched at a considerably lower level than the science ("endless" confused with "timeless" seemed to me like a bit of failed expository legerdemain). This is annoying, because presumably a book called "The Infinite Book" will be read by people with an interest in both camps.

Nonetheless Barrow writes well, and has also provided a very comprehensive bibliography for anyone wanting to read further about a fascinating subject, but despite its title, in the end this is a book that whets the appetite, rather than trying to cover the entire field of his subject - which would admittedly be a daunting undertaking!

Infinity Math or Theology5
This book is a wonderful read. The Math is kept descriptive rather than technical and is easy to follow. The writing is clear and easy to read. The theories and concepts however stretch the mind. In contemplating the nature of infinity we are taken into the vast and the tiny. It crosses the boundary into theology and I was quick to pass it on to a clergyman friend.

Best Barrow I have read4
I have read already several books from John D Barrow (Theories of Everything, Book of Nothing, Pi in the Sky), and I found some of them a bit vague and with some irrelevant chapters. To me, this one is the best one from Barrow I have read. The topic could have been discussed even more in depth, but overall, the book kept me turning pages from the beginningto end, and I have not read many better written popular science books. Even though there were some, therefore I give 4 of 5 :-))