The Giant Leap: Mankind Heads for the Stars
|
| Price: |
29 new or used available from £0.01
Average customer review:Product Description
Andrew Berry's vision of the future - interstellar journeys that will carry people from our solar system to explore and colonise other planets. He writes with lucidity and humour but his ideas are firmly rooted in scientific fact.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1228864 in Books
- Published on: 2000-01-06
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 352 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
Even if you don't believe it is ever going to happen, the idea of humanity's colonisation of far planets and persistence until the latter cold days of the universe has a certain attractive mad arrogance to it. Adrian Berry is a strong believer in a lot of things--dogmatism is perhaps an odd fault in one so determined to remind us of the martyrdoms of Galileo and Giordano Bruno--and the vast enterprise of galaxy-wide travel is one of the things he believes in. He takes us through the problems of travel--the speed of light has to be lived with or got around--and colonisation. Life on the frontier is tough and expresses considerable optimism about all of it; there are better explanations of topics such as relativity and cryogenic suspension--so-called "cold sleep"--but he is never less than fluent and clear. What is perhaps less convincing are his extended diatribes against government--he believes, thus far against the evidence, that private enterprise will take us to the planets and beyond--and his belief that computer games will keep people happy as they travel through infinite silent space. And when the universe ends, at least we will have tried. --Roz Kaveney
About the Author
Adrian Berry was for nineteen years science correspondent of the Daily Telegraph and he still writes that paper's monthy Sky at Night column.
Customer Reviews
A good read on a fascinating subject
An enjoyable light read which can be achieved at near light speed! This is journalism close to its best, addressing a complex subject from multiple angles. Where it succeeds is in the subject matter. How many of us have wondered what the step beyond exploring our solar system will mean? It's pretty much all here, though there are a few caveats needed. This is not reference material and is almost totally derivative of previously published books and papers.
The coverage is also rather wide and some may feel short-changed by Mr Berry not following through on some of the topics covered.
Some may find the topic of politics not addressed to their satisfaction - in chapters 'Starships and Politicians' and 'Twilight of the State'.
Elsewhere, the detail is reminiscent of a newspaper article: when it comes to detail within ones area of expertise there are real howlers. This may be to some the weakest part of the book, challenging the authority that Mr Berry assumes by writing this book. Another reviewer has spotted the error in the timeline for 1965, which has Ed White being the first spacewalker instead of Alexei Leonov. A minor slip, but not solitary. The author fails to flag that civilisations are unlikely from first generation stars (no heavy elements from which life can appear) (ref p61 etc). The discussion of navigational errors getting the crew 'lost' is unlikely as we have 3-D info on every star within 100 light years of the Sun and computers even today can create star maps from anywhere in the vicinity of the Sun.
There are some throw-away lines that need that - to be thrown away. The author occasionally uses too wide a paint-brush for his canvas, notably p182, "the modern electronics industry" is supposedly based on the Apollo lunar module descent computer. An almighty howler is (p29 and p258) that the Managing Director in JVC invented videorecorders in 1975. The first practical video recorder was first demonstrated in 1956. Even John Logie Baird made video recordings in 1927! Of course he means domestic videos, but even then 'invention' is too much.
But these are simply where technical proof-reading has been inadequate. The book remains enjoyable despite the above comments.
