The Fabric of the Cosmos: Space, Time, and the Texture of Reality
 

The Fabric of the Cosmos: Space, Time, and the Texture of Reality (Vintage)

by Brian Greene

As a boy, Brian Greene read Albert Camus' The Myth of Sisyphus and was transformed. Camus, in Greene's paraphrase, insisted that the hero triumphs "by relinquishing everything beyond immediate experience." After wrestling with this idea, however, Greene rejected Camus and realized that his true idols were physicists; scientists who struggled "to assess life and to experience the universe at all... (read more)

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Bubulus
  • Rated 5 stars

It seems like Greene takes concepts which by all rights should be very difficult to understand and transforms them, through ridiculously well-thought-out analogies, into something for the casual reader. This is just a spectacular book for anyone interested in the current state of affairs of modern physics, and what scientists really mean when they talk about the origins of the universe.

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  • Rated 4.215384 stars
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  • Rated 4.5 stars
 

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  • noblesonk

    noblesonk said:

    By reading this book I recapped a lot of what I learnt during my college days. it is crisp, well written, i guess will be easily understood by nonphysics folks

    posted Monday, September 10 2007
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