ORDERS

Readings Orders 0

DEMANDS

Readings Demands 0

The Infinite Book: ashort Guide To the Boundless Timeless and Endless
[Paperback - 2006]
On Demand
Availability in 4-6 weeks on receipt of order
List Price: $18
Our Price: Rs.2995 Rs.2546
Standard Discount: 15%
You Save: Rs.449
Category: Science
Sub-category: Popular Science
Additional Category: Physics
Publisher: Vintage | ISBN: 9781400032242 | Pages: 328
Shipping Weight: 0 | Dimensions: 0

For a thousand years, infinity has proven to be a difficult and illuminating challenge for mathematicians and theologians. It certainly is the strangest idea that humans have ever thought. Where did it come from and what is it telling us about our Universe? Can there actually be infinities? Is matter infinitely divisible into ever-smaller pieces? But infinity is also the place where things happen that don't. All manner of strange paradoxes and fantasies characterize an infinite universe. If our Universe is infinite then an infinite number of exact copies of you are, at this very moment, reading an identical sentence on an identical planet somewhere else in the Universe. Now Infinity is the darling of cutting edge research, the measuring stick used by physicists, cosmologists, and mathematicians to determine the accuracy of their theories. From the paradox of Zeno’s arrow to string theory, Cambridge professor John Barrow takes us on a grand tour of this most elusive of ideas and describes with clarifying subtlety how this subject has shaped, and continues to shape, our very sense of the world in which we live. The Infinite Book is a thoroughly entertaining and completely accessible account of the biggest subject of them all–infinity.

John D. Barrow was a professor of mathematical sciences and director of the Millennium Mathematics Project at Cambridge University and a Fellow of the Royal Society.He was awarded the 2006 Templeton Prize for "Progress Toward Research or Discoveries about Spiritual Realities" for his "writings about the relationship between life and the universe, and the nature of human understanding [which] have created new perspectives on questions of ultimate concern to science and religion".He was a member of a United Reformed Church, which he described as teaching "a traditional deistic picture of the universe".

Bestsellers in Science

View All