276°
Posted 20 hours ago

HUMAN UNIVERSE

£4.495£8.99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

Thanks to the artisan glass-blowers of Renaissance Venice, Galileo was able to build the first telescope and discover our orbital position around the sun—relegating us to just one among a number of planets and effecting our demotion from the center of the universe. We are insignificant because we are highly vulnerable to the workings of a universe of unpredictable moving parts that does not appreciate our planet-bound biology very much and whose scale is far beyond our imagining except in awesome mathematical and theoretical terms. In the final episode of the series, Professor Brian Cox explores the future of our home planet, its unfolding relationship with the rest of the universe, and its effect on our destiny as a species. Even the 'Big Bang' (last refuge of the theistic scoundrel) is not merely under assault. Cosmology now makes it a blip amongst uncountable infinite blips. The conditions for life or not come into existence in a complex multiverse in which all things are possible. The book is certainly a relative of Carl Sagan's Cosmos It explains reality through the examination of five ambitious questions: Where are we? Are we alone? Who are we? Why are we here? And what is our future? Through the use of interesting stories and simply explained complex scientific principles, Brian Cox provides answers to these questions....This book made me feel wondrous on multiple occasions with its mind-blowing revelations....Somewhere in the book, Professor Brian Cox mentioned that his publication is his letter to mankind ..half of the book builds around the Drake equation, and each element of that equation has a story to tell.

Human Universe - Professor Brian Cox, Andrew Cohen - Google Books Human Universe - Professor Brian Cox, Andrew Cohen - Google Books

It explains fine tuning as a result of the eternal inflaction that leads to a infinite inmortal universo growing fractal like withut end,there is not fine tuning problema,given the infinite multiverse,we are inevitable. Find sources: "Human Universe"book– news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR ( November 2019) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message) Spy satellites orbiting the moon. Space metals worth more than most countries’ GDP. People on Mars within the next ten years. A brief history of life on Earth. “We are mammals, which first appeared 225 million years ago in the Triassic era.” This book must be included in the school syllabus, let our children know what exactly the universe, wornders of the solar system, just one example,Deepak Chopra, MD serves as the Founder and Chairman of The Chopra Foundation, and Co-Founder of the Chopra Center for Wellbeing. They give brief explanations and then embed the complexity in a narrative that tells us what the science actually means and challenges us to challenge it. But the hidden sub-text of the work is not just scientific but cultural. Maybe - just maybe - this is that kind of book you're supposed to read over so as to have a better understanding of it all?

Human Universe also enjoyed - Goodreads Readers who enjoyed Human Universe also enjoyed - Goodreads

An excellent topic, answering big philosophical questions based on the best of our current knowledge. “This book asks questions about our origins, our destiny, and our place in the universe.” Excellent, easy-to-follow format. Each section begins with a big philosophical question followed up by bite-size supporting topics. One gets the impression that the expansion of the TV format fell apart here because Cox wanted to lobby for investment in the asteroid impact space programme. This is where the bulk of the irritating posturing noted in the first paragraph appears.The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guideline for books. Please help to demonstrate the notability of the topic by citing reliable secondary sources that are independent of the topic and provide significant coverage of it beyond a mere trivial mention. If notability cannot be shown, the article is likely to be merged, redirected, or deleted. Sagan said we are made of star stuff and the Vedas and Gita state we are the Universe. There is nothing within us that is not without and we are all one. So how did it happen, that the geladas were left sulking in a corner of Africa, while we went on to colonise the world, and beyond? It’s a story and a journey that continues in Ethiopia, where, more than 250,000 years ago, early humans first made tools that might look simple now, but required collaborative working and the passing on of information and language, in the same way as the International Space Station does … In summary, this is an inspirational and fun book to read. Brian Cox is one of my favorite science personalities and his books reflect his warm, engaging personality. However, this is not his best effort. This book though very good does not live to the standards of some of his previous outstanding books like Wonders of the Universe. That aside, this is an excellent complementary piece to the documentary series of the same name and is worth your time. I recommend it. Do you like quantum physics? Do you like contemplating the theory of relativity? Do you like to think about matter and how thoughts form matter, and how this can relate to religious relics? Does pondering the creation of the universe thrill you? Do you like to thread religion into science? Then this is the book for you.

Human universe : Cox, Brian, 1968- : Free Download, Borrow Human universe : Cox, Brian, 1968- : Free Download, Borrow

Great examples where science clashed with religion, handled with the utmost respect and care. “Catholic dogma asserted that the Moon and the other heavenly bodies were perfect, unblemished spheres. Previous astronomers who had viewed the Moon, either with the naked eye or through telescopes, had drawn a two-dimensional blotchy surface, but Galileo saw the patterns of light and dark differently. His training in chiaroscuro revealed to him an alien lunar landscape of mountain ranges and craters.” How the “conscious” and “humans" network in this universe. Einstein’s special theory of relativity (STR) equation to help illustrate how our thoughts (i.e., energy and the unseen) and the physical universe (i.e., mass and the seen) are connected and, at times, interchangeable. Then he goes on to explain the Quantum World and Quantum Reality and how the Heisenberg cut can be applicable in explaining the “conscious and human universe” in scientific and mathematical terms. Chopra’s medical training is in internal medicine and endocrinology. He is a Fellow of the American College of Physicians and a member of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists. Dr. Chopra serves as Co-Founder and Chairman of The Chopra Center for Wellbeing, Founder of The Chopra Well on YouTube, Adjunct Professor of Executive Programs at Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, Adjunct Professor at Columbia Business School, Columbia University, Assistant Clinical Professor, in the Family and Preventive Medicine Department at the University of California, San Diego, Health Sciences, Faculty at Walt Disney Imagineering, and Senior Scientist with The Gallup Organization. If you’re expecting something based a bit more on humans and how they evolved, remember it’s Brian Cox and think bigger — it’s more about our place in the universe, our understanding of it, and what we might find out there in the vastness of space. It’s not really about us as a species, I think, but about how we see the world around us. So yeah, more physics, less biology. Which makes sense, given the author, and it’s easier to absorb than his other book I’ve read (Universal). It goes into interesting stuff like the Fermi Paradox and the Drake Equation, which is right up my street, and it avoids too much jargon or demands that the reader understand math.urn:lcp:humanuniverse0000coxb:epub:db2dfd2f-ec58-4612-8b0e-fa45954f9d43 Foldoutcount 0 Identifier humanuniverse0000coxb Identifier-ark ark:/13960/t9386jw3z Invoice 1652 Isbn 9780007488803 What a fantastic journey this book presents!! Rich in detail, awesome in fact, it weaves a compelling tapestry of the sum of human knowledge right up to this point in time, explaining, in patient and easily readable prose what we know about how we have gotten to where we are. It offers penetrative insights of explanation that combine the known laws that govern everything in the universe and considers every angle, postulating different points of view and alternative explanations. It just boggles my mind how scientific books written for the layman like this one mix theology and philosophy. Why write a love letter which implies irrational non scientific behaviour when the book is about science? This book is based on its namesake BBC documentary, Human Universe. If you did not see it yet, you should – totally worth it; the others in the series too. Brian Cox does an amazing job presenting it – his enthusiasm and joy are written all over his face and you can hear it also in his voice. Part of that excitement is present here, in the book, too. Cox and Cohen look at five basic questions - where are we? are we alone? who are we? why are we here (not meaning why some man in a beard decided to put us here but what are the conditions that enabled our existence) and, the weakest section, what is our future?

Human Universe - Wikipedia

Instead of making a summary of the book, I’ll better leave you some fragments from it. If these do not convince you to read it, I don’t know what will. That's a big claim. For two authors trained in science, their conclusions are far from scientific. But they are upfront about that from the beginning. Science, they point out, has found many answers to questions about our world. But on the big, important, metaphysical questions, science is coming up short because of the very methods that have served us so well over the past four centuries. Since science is based on observation and thus far answers to these questions are unobservable, maybe it is time to move on, they suggest, to other ways of viewing reality itself. Brian Edward Cox, OBE (born 3 March 1968) is a British particle physicist, a Royal Society University Research Fellow, PPARC Advanced Fellow and Professor at the University of Manchester. He is a member of the High Energy Physics group at the University of Manchester, and works on the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, near Geneva, Switzerland. He is working on the R&D project of the FP420 experiment in an international collaboration to upgrade the ATLAS and the CMS experiment by installing additional, smaller detectors at a distance of 420 metres from the interaction points of the main experiments.I am delighted by Professor Cox's introductory comment that "Two million years ago we were apemen. Now we are spacemen. That has happened, as far as we know, nowhere else. That is worth celebrating."

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment