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Book of the Cosmos
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Book of the Cosmos

Book of the Cosmos

Imagining the Universe from Heraclitus to Hawking

Dennis Richard Danielson

556 pages, parution le 11/03/2002

Résumé

A sweeping account of humanity's evolving vision of the universe, as viewed through the writings of the most exceptional thinkers in history.What is the cosmos? How did it come into being? How are we related to it, and what is our place in it? The Book of the Cosmos assembles for the first time in one volume the great minds of the Western world who have considered these questions from biblical times to the present. It is a book of many authors-Aristotle, Ptolemy, Copernicus, and Galileo are here, of course, in all their genius, but so are Edgar Allan Poe, Annie Jump Cannon (a "human computer" and lyrical classifier of stars), and Sir Martin Rees, who proposes an "ensemble of universes" of which ours happens to be among the most interesting.In these pages the universe is made and unmade in a variety of configurations; it spins along on superstrings, teems with intelligent life, and could end without warning. The Book of the Cosmos provides a thrilling read to set the heart racing and the mind soaring.

Contents

Acknowledgments xxiii
Introduction: Telescopes for the Mind xxv

Part 1 Cosmological Origins

1 We Have Seen But Few of His Works 2
2 Twice into the Same River? 12
3 The Things of the Universe Are Not Sliced Off with a Hatchet 18
4 Atoms and Empty Space 23
5 The Moving Image of Eternity 31
6 The Potency of Place 37
7 He Supposes the Earth to Revolve 43
8 A Geometrical Argument 46
9 No Erratic or Pointless Movement 50
10 Turning the Universe Upside Down 58

Part 2 Ptolemy, Middle Earth, Middle Ages

11 The Peculiar Nature of the Universe 68
12 The Weaknesses of the Hypotheses 75
13 Their Peculiar Behavior Confounds Mortals' Minds 78
14 We Consider Time a Thing Created 82
15 From This Point Hang the Heavens 89
16 If a Man Were in the Sky and Could See the Earth Clearly 92
17 A Single Universe in Which Each Star Influences Every Other 96

Part 3 Copernicus to Newton

18 Almost Contrary to Common Sense 104
19 The Poetic Structure of the World 118
20 This Art Unfolds the Wisdom of God 122
21 A Star Never Seen Before Our Time 128
22 This Little Dark Star Wherein We Live 132
23 Innumerable Suns, and an Infinite Number of Earths 140
24 Neither Known Nor Observed by Anyone Before 145
25 Galileo and the Geometrization of Astronomical Space 155
26 This Boat Which Is Our Earth 163
27 The Two Books of God Agree With Each Other 173
28 They Hoist the Earth Up and Down Like a Ball 178
29 A World in the Moon 184
30 A Very Liquid Heaven 191
31 The Eternal Silence of These Infinite Spaces 195
32 This Pendent World 198
33 But One Little Family of the Universe 206
34 Into the Celestial Spaces 220
35 Discernible Ends and Final Causes 229
36 The Planetarians, and This Small Speck of Dirt 233

Part 4 Unfurling Newton's Universe

37 A Signal of God 240
38 The Beautiful Pre-established Order 245
39 An Event So Glorious to the Newtonian Doctrine of Gravity 250
40 A Voice from the Starry Heavens 255
41 This Most Surprising Zone of Light 259
42 How Fortunate Is This Globe! 265
43 To Become Adequately Copernican 272
44 Laboratories of the Universe 277
45 As Certain as the Planetary Orbits 285
46 The Intelligence of the Watch-Maker 291
47 Must We Then Reject the Infinitude of the Stars? 294
48 The Great Principle That Governs the Universe 298
49 The Unfailing Connection and Course of Events 302
50 The Primordial Particle 307
51 The Shadow! The Shadow! 312
52 Unraveled Starlight 317
53 Astronomy Still Young 326

Part 5 The Universe Re-Imagined

54 The Peculiar Interest of Mars 334
55 Cosmical Evolution 342
56 Cosmos Without Peer and Without Price 347
57 Curved Space and Poetry of the Universe 350
58 The Man in the Accelerated Chest 356
59 It Is Not True That "All Is Relative" 366
60 Spacetime Tells Matter How to Move 371
61 The Architecture of the Celestial Mansions 380
62 The Quickening Influence of the Universe 385
63 You Have Broken Newton's Back 390
64 The Realm of the Nebulae 394
65 Driven to Admit Anti-Chance 401
66 Did the Expansion Start from the Beginning? 407
67 This Big Bang Idea 411

Part 6 Beginnings and Ends

68 Incomprehensible Magnitude, Unimaginable Darkness 418
69 That All-But-Eternal Crimson Twilight 423
70 The Cosmic Oasis 426
71 The Very Womb of Life 430
72 The Urge to Trace the History of the Universe 433
73 To Transform the Universe on a Cosmological Scale 438
74 The No Boundary Condition 448
75 Prisons of Light 452
76 A Very Lumpy Universe 460
77 A Cosmic Archipelago 464
78 Cosmological Natural Selection 467
79 The Ultimate Free Lunch 482
80 Was There a Big Bang? 488
81 What We Cannot See and Yet Know Must Be There 498
82 Their Extravagant Smallness 506
83 Cosmic Dust-Bunnies 510
84 Mystery at the End of the Universe 516
85 Do the Heavens Declare? 522

Glossary 529
Further Reading 537
Copyright Acknowlegments 539
Index

Caractéristiques techniques

  PAPIER
Éditeur(s) Perseus Publishing
Auteur(s) Dennis Richard Danielson
Parution 11/03/2002
Nb. de pages 556
Format 15,5 x 23,3
Couverture Broché
Poids 824g
Intérieur Noir et Blanc
EAN13 9780738204987
ISBN13 978-0-7382-0498-7

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