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Hubert Reeves (1932–2023)

Author of Origins: Speculations on the Cosmos, Earth and Mankind

85+ Works 1,308 Members 24 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Series

Works by Hubert Reeves

Origins: Speculations on the Cosmos, Earth and Mankind (1996) — Author — 277 copies, 5 reviews
Poussières d'étoiles (1984) 97 copies, 1 review
L'Univers expliqué à mes petits-enfants (2011) 80 copies, 1 review
Dernières nouvelles du cosmos (1994) 70 copies, 2 reviews
Mal de Terre (2003) — Author — 65 copies, 2 reviews
Je n'aurai pas le temps (2008) 42 copies, 2 reviews
Chroniques des atomes et des galaxies (2007) 30 copies, 1 review
La Synchronicité, l'âme et la science (1991) 15 copies, 1 review
Compagnons de voyage (1992) 10 copies
HORA DE EMBRIAGARSE LA (1988) 5 copies
Intimes convictions (1997) 5 copies, 1 review
La Terre vue du coeur (2019) 4 copies
Les Secrets de l'univers (2016) 4 copies
Soleil (1990) 3 copies
La Terre et les Hommes (2017) 2 copies
Terracide (2008) 2 copies
Já Não Terei Tempo (2010) 2 copies
El universo (2019) 1 copy
L'Univers 1 copy
Arbres aimés (2009) 1 copy

Associated Works

Tagged

1DBF (9) astronomy (70) astrophysics (28) big bang (7) biography (5) biology (6) books (5) cosmology (33) cosmos (7) ecology (6) environment (8) essay (27) evolution (14) French (19) history (7) Kindle (7) nature (5) non-fiction (28) philosophy (18) physics (17) physique (6) popular science (7) science (116) sciences (35) Segundo de primaria (5) SO (8) space (8) to-read (25) universe (13) XX (6)

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

26 reviews
A very simplistic look at life and the origin of the cosmos, set up as interviews by a journalist with three scientists. It is interesting that a quest for the meaning of life didn't lead our journalist to any biologists, since they are the people who study life. Instead, we get a physicist, a chemist, and an anthropologist, which means we get biological theories filtered through the lens of non-biologists. In addition, the journalist is determined to find an actual meaning for life, and show more seems to prefer to answer that meaning in a divine creator. Her attempts to put a divine creator into the mix are met with skepticism by the scientists, though there is a lot of waffling and non-overlapping nonsense generated. In the end, the book is weak not just because it is nearly 20 years old (the science is general enough that it might not matter too terribly), but because it really doesn't go anywhere outside the interest zone of the journalist who generates the questions. The speculation - not, not speculation, certainty - that we will be living extra-terrestrially in some not-too-distant future also grates; first because it isn't as likely as they suggest, and second because we don't have any right to take our messy selves out to screw up another world before we've figured out how to live without destroying everything around us. show less
This was a fun read. Enjoyable because Reeves has managed to explain very clearly and very succinctly what many other scientists would make very hard to understand. It is also very sweet.

I should add that it was recommended by Manny Rayner.
Reviewer Martin Beech: "... I recommend that this book be read for two reasons, to discover the story of the universe, but more importantly to feed the imagination."

Awards

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Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
85
Also by
3
Members
1,308
Popularity
#19,626
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
24
ISBNs
197
Languages
12
Favorited
2

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