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Hardcover Our Cosmic Habitat Book

ISBN: 0691089264

ISBN13: 9780691089263

Our Cosmic Habitat

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Book Overview

Our universe seems strangely ''biophilic, '' or hospitable to life. Is this happenstance, providence, or coincidence? According to cosmologist Martin Rees, the answer depends on the answer to another... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

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Deep Mysteries of the Cosmos Simply Told

Martin Rees, Astronomer Royal of Great Britain, wonderfully tells everything about cosmology in this concise book. The reader is lead to a quick tour from Big Bang to biospheres, from the beginning to the end of the universe, and from the micro-world to the cosmos. Yet the description is not superficial but very deep.Among many of mysteries we learn from this book, let me mention only a few big ones. (1) Dark matter: This prevails over visible matter in constituting the total energy of the universe. It is the No. 1 problem in astronomy today, and ranks high as a physics problem, too. (2) Vacuum energy: This is the origin of the accelerating expansion of the universe. Its nature is a challenge to theorists; it holds important clues to the early universe and the nature of space. (3) Other universes: Our universe may be just one of them. While seeming to be in the province of metaphysics rather than physics, these already lie within the proper purview of science.The author says that the phrases often used in popular books, "final theory" and "theory of everything," are very misleading and that some of nature's complexity may never be explained and understood. These words just made the scales fall from my eyes. I strongly recommend this book to laypersons interested in astronomy, cosmology, problems at the boundary between science and philosophy, and the deep mysteries of nature.

Our Cosmic Habitat

Our Cosmic Habitat written by Martin J. Rees is a book that looks at the fundamentals and conjectures of our galaxy and for that matter, of what we know, the universe.To link the cosmos and the microworld requires a breakthrough. Twentieth-century physics rests on two great foundations: the quantum principle(that which governs the "inner space" of atoms) and Einstein's relativity theory, which describes time, outer space, and gravity but doesn't incorporate quantum effects.Yet looking at the two great foundations you'd think that physics could link the two, well, surprise... they haven't. The structures erected on the foundations are still as far apart as the day they were proposed. Until there is a unified theory of the forces governing both cosmos and microworld, we won't be able to understand the fundamental features of our universe... the superstring theory shows the most promiss.Superstring or M-theory in which each point in our ordinary space is actually a tightly folded in six dimensions, wrapped up on scales perhaps a billion billion times smaller than an atomic nucleus, and particles are represented as vibrating loops of "string."As you can see this can get pretty deep, but the author has written this book so it can be easily understood and comprehended by the layreader. The author has a very effective prose and the narrative moves quickly and the reader gets a tour-de-force in the study of cosmology.The book has three parts and each part has chapters. The chapters break the information down into easily understood groupings. A view of a multiverse or may universesis not just found in science-fiction anymore. It seems that the multiverse is getting play from those who are willing to venture out.All in all, this was a very readable and engrossing read. It moved quickly and there are illustrating within the book that help in explaining different aspects of what the author is relaying to the reader. The book requires that the reader has some science background to get the most out of the book.

Beautiful book on cosmology from a wise astronomer

Martin Rees, who is the Astronomer Royal of Great Britain, returns here to the speculative cosmological mode that he so successfully employed in Before the Beginning: Our Universe and Others (1997) and brings us up to date on his latest thinking. He sets the tone by featuring a quotation from acclaimed science fiction writer Olaf Stapledon's novel Star Maker (1937) to the effect that all that we are and have been is "but a flicker in one day of the lives of the stars." The title Our Cosmic Habitat reinforces the long and distant view that Rees wants to assume, seeing the universe as enormously large and long-lived. The book was composed from the Scribner Lectures that Rees gave at Princeton University.The ground covered reflects a growing trend in cosmology, that of thinking aloud and in public about matters that have little or no chance of being scientifically tested now or perhaps ever. In particular Rees speculates on the possibility and nature of other universes beyond our own. Indeed, he refers to a "multiverse" with the implication that the universe we experience is just one of a possibly infinite number of other universes, distant from us spatially, temporally and even dimensionally. In other words he seems to be talking about things we can never have any information about!To the old physicists this must seem a sacrilege, but then Rees himself is no spring chicken! I find it refreshing that a man of his stature and reputation can so freely speculate on matters that are of such complexity and distance, as he notes on page 156, that they "may never be explained or understood." But what I think Rees is getting at, and why he feels justified as a scientist in making these speculative ventures, is that although these other possible universes are completely removed from ours in terms of any possible perception, they may in fact affect our universe in some way that may eventually be measured or otherwise discerned. For example (this is my speculation) suppose we finally did get an indisputable, proven theory of everything, somehow wedding gravity and quantum mechanics, and found that our universe was in some way--again indisputably--different from what that theory predicted. Such a difference would have to come from something outside, perhaps as the signature of an effect from another universe.As one would expect from a senior scientist, Rees gives us some political guidance in scientific matters. On page 31 he expresses his view that a justification for going into space is to free the human race from the possibility of extinction from a "catastrophe that we bring on ourselves," through "experimental misadventure or a terrorist act that deploys techniques from bioscience." Incidentally Rees estimates that the chance in a lifetime of anyone alive today of encountering an Earth-crossing asteroid at less than 1 in 10,000, which he describes as "no lower than the risk...of being killed in an air crash." Consequently, he finds it "fully w

The current universe knowledge explained

As a non-scientist, the universe has always mystified me. This book doesn't have all the answers, but it does convey a lot of useful information in a clear and readable form. I hope the author is correct in his prediction that within the decade the space telescopes and ground accelerators may unlock even more fascinating secrets. If you have read many of the current crop of Cosmology books, nothing in here is new or surprising, but the coverage is thorough and since it is so readable I feel like I got a lot out of it. I never get tired reading of the birth and life of the universe and one day I hope to understand relativity. This book was one more baby step for me.

How Did We Get Here?

People have always wondered about the place of the Earth in the cosmic scheme of things. Cosmology, the science of the biggest of all big pictures, has over the past century been one of the areas of science that people have the most curiosity about. Cosmologists were not always well respected by other scientists; their work was speculative and on the fringe, it was thought. But then the strange idea of the Big Bang Theory took hold. In 1965, cosmic background radiation was found all over the universe that had been predicted by the Big Bang Theory. In 1990, measurements from the Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) satellite provided a spectacular confirmation that the radiation came from a huge explosion of matter and space 13 billion years ago. Sir Martin Rees was one of the celebrated circle of astrophysicists at Cambridge that also produced Stephen Hawking, and he is now the Astronomer Royal. Cosmology is no longer fringe; in _Our Cosmic Habitat_ (Princeton University Press), Rees insists, "The big bang theory deserves to be taken at least as seriously as anything geologists or paleontologists tell us about the early history of our Earth."Rees's entertaining summary of his stance on cosmological issues serves as a guide to where we live in the universe. Cosmologists who take up the chore of explaining their work to the public have enormous obstacles against them. Their science uses more of mathematics than observation, and the extent of times involved and the counterintuitive strangeness of different forms of matter and energy may be data that experts get a feel for, but will always be foreign to most of us. Hawking's _A Brief History of Time_ is a best seller (and let us be thankful that this is so!), but I have never run into a reader, myself included, who wasn't mystified by big blocks of it. Rees's book, written as an inaugural to the Scribner Lectures at Princeton, is concise, wise, and witty, and I think most people would find it more accessible than Hawking's. Rees has written to answer Einstein's famous question, "What interests me most is whether God could have made the world differently," and this is as good an answer as we are going to get until further facts turn up.Rees has thought deeply about the "anthropic" contingencies that resulted in a planet with human life. If gravity or various other forces were tweaked only slightly, completely different universes, adverse to the formation of life, would result. He is not satisfied with the answer that if the contingencies were not just so, we wouldn't be here, and so the world looks fine-tuned just for us because we are here. The answer of a creator who deliberately dialed in the numbers smacks of a "god of the gaps," the unsatisfactory explanation of last resort for mysteries, an explanation that is not scientific and actually makes for more mysteries than it answers. The final part of Rees's stimulating book is devoted to the idea of a multiverse of which our own univers
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