The Book of the Cosmos: Imagining the Universe from Heraclitus to Hawking
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Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #966688 in Books
- Published on: 2001-11-15
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 592 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
So many books published these days seem to deliberately ignore the forest for the trees, or the leaves, or the chloroplasts, or the chemistry of biopigments. Readers interested in big questions usually have to make do with the obligatory summing-up at the end in which the author tries to justify his or her narrow interest through heroic feats of recontextualisation. The Book of the Cosmos: Imagining The Universe from Heraclitus to Hawking, on the other hand, is over 600 pages of well-expressed deep thought on the biggest picture of them all. In roughly chronological order, editor Dennis Danielson presents 85 sets of excerpts from big thinkers from Biblical times to the present, introducing each to the modern reader with insightful running commentary that is consistently helpful but unobtrusive.
The ancient Greeks hit the ground running, leaving us a rich conceptual legacy that we are still exploring and exploiting even as our own work becomes more and more machine-mediated. Danielson gives us a wide base of ancient thought to give us a sense of our heritage, including both obvious choices like Plato and less well-known writers like Parmenides in his canon. The often-neglected Middle Ages brought us Ptolemy, Moses Maimonides and others who set the stage for the Renaissance and Enlightenment, and the writings from these times betray an unexpected continuity of thought between the ancient and modern eras. Of course, the late 20th century selections from writers like Freeman Dyson and Steven Weinberg which end the book shouldn't imply an end to cosmological thinking; if anything, the last chapters of The Book of the Cosmos provoke a hunger for more. --Rob Lightner

