New Theories of Everything

by John D. Barrow

On This Page

Description

The author presents and explains the latest theories, predictions and controversies surrounding the ultimate explanation, from superstrings and multiverses to speculations about the world as a computer, and the implications of these theories for own existence.

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

4 reviews
A great book by a great writer; but it's great only if you have an excellent layman's knowledge of science. The casual science reader will not be able to understand it, and a professional scientist may already know everything Barrow has to say.
I was afraid this would just be a too-lightly edited second edition of _Theories of Everything_ (1992, same subtitle), and it is. It is annoying that the genuinely new portions are not typographically differentiated from the old. Also annoying is the surfeit of theological references. A lot of good stuff, needlessly contaminated.
A lot of information in this
A lot of information in this

Members

Recently Added By

Lists

Author Information

Picture of author.
38+ Works 6,150 Members
John D. Barrow is a scientist who writes accessibly about astrophysics and cosmology for both the general reader and the expert. Born in 1952, in London, England, Barrow earned a B.S. degree with first-class honors from the University of Durham in 1974. Three years later he received his doctorate from Magdalen College, Oxford. He was a junior show more research lecturer in astrophysics at Oxford University from 1977 to 1980 and became a lecturer in astronomy at the University of Sussex in Brighton in 1981. With coauthor Joseph Silk, Barrow published The Left Hand of Creation: The Origin and Evolution of the Expanding Universe in 1983. The book, which explains particle physics and its application to the creation and evolution of the universe, quickly won praise for its lucid style. Barrow delved further into this topic in 1994 with The Origin of the Universe. In this work he explored such questions as the possibility of extra dimensions to space, the beginning of time, and how human existence is part and parcel of the origin and composition of the universe. Barrow's other books include Pi and the Sky; Theories of Everything; and The World Within the World. He has also contributed many articles to such professional journals as New Scientist, Scientific American, and Nature. (Bowker Author Biography) John D. Barrow is research professor of mathematical sciences at Cambridge University. His previous books include "Between Inner & Outer Space", "The Universe That Discovered Itself", & "The Origin of the Universe". He lives in England. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
2007 (Second Edition) (Second Edition); 1990 (First Edition) (First Edition)
Dedication
To Roger, who still believes there should always be something rather than nothing
First words
How, when, and why did the Universe come into being?
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)For, to see through everything, would leave us seeing nothing at all.

Classifications

Genres
Science & Nature, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction, Philosophy
DDC/MDS
501Natural sciences & mathematicsSciencePhilosophy and theory
LCC
Q175 .B225ScienceScience (General)General
BISAC

Statistics

Members
222
Popularity
146,795
Reviews
4
Rating
½ (3.71)
Languages
Czech, English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
8
ASINs
1