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Between Inner Space and Outer Space: Essays on Science, Art, and Philosophy
 
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Between Inner Space and Outer Space: Essays on Science, Art, and Philosophy [Hardcover]

John D. Barrow (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0198502540 978-0198502548 May 20, 1999 First edition.
The origins of life on earth, the workings of the human mind, the mysteries of the Universe itself--profound questions such as these were once the province of philosophy and theology alone. Today they have become the staple--and indeed the hallmark--of the finest writing about science. And few science writers have tackled the big questions as persistently and as insightfully as astronomer John Barrow.
Now, in Between Inner Space and Outer Space, Barrow brings together dozens of essays that offer a sweeping account of his explorations along the boundary lines of science, philosophy, and religion. Here is an invigorating tour of topics such as cosmology, evolution, Grand Unified Theories, complexity and chaos, the nature of time, super string theory, quantum mechanics, particle physics, Big Bang theory, and much more. Barrow's range is remarkable. He examines, for instance, what science can tell us about our love of music or why certain paintings appeal to us. He recounts the dramatic discoveries made by the satellite COBE (Cosmic Background Explorer) and reveals what these findings tell us about the origins of the Cosmos. He discusses the debate over the nature of the universe waged by Stephen Hawking and Roger Penrose. And he offers a thoughtful review of E.O. Wilson's Consilience, seconding Wilson's criticism of social scientists who remain quite ignorant of the key insights made by the life sciences.
Leavened with a sprightly sense of humor, Between Inner Space and Outer Space illuminates modern science as it provides much food for thought about life's ultimate questions.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

The publication over a decade ago of Stephen Hawking's runaway bestseller A Brief History of Time triggered a flood of more or less comprehensible books about the frontiers of physics and mathematics. And to judge by most of their authors, we are on the brink of finding the theory of everything, or the key to the cosmos, or some other Holy Grail of science.

Rarer are authors such as John Barrow, professor of physics at Sussex University, a genuine expert in these fields who writes coolly and clearly about the current state of play. Between Inner Space and Outer Space is a collection of Barrow's writings about the frontiers of science dating back to 1980, and is remarkable for the number of fresh twists and insights it brings to many now-familiar debates. For example, are scientists really close to a theory of everything, uniting all the fundamental forces in the universe and all the particles on which they act? Barrow shows how the quest may be stymied by fundamental limits to knowledge that have emerged from 20th-century mathematics. Are scientists really close to understanding the birth of the universe? Again, Barrow shows that a whole set of limitations--not the least of which is the fact that light travels at a finite speed--forever stops us from knowing for sure if our ideas are right. As in any collection, there is a modicum of repetition and a few ill-judged selections. Even so, any reader seeking thoughtful, sophisticated, and above all original writing about the cutting edge of physics and mathematics need look no further. --Robert Matthews, Amazon.co.uk

Review

..it is consistently diverting and illuminating and indeed, at its best, hard to put down in its communication of the excitement of seeing the world as an exercise in the mathematics of energy. Hugh Lawson-Tancred, The Spectator

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA; First edition. edition (May 20, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0198502540
  • ISBN-13: 978-0198502548
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.4 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,110,273 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars rehash of his earlier fine books, May 26, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Between Inner Space and Outer Space: Essays on Science, Art, and Philosophy (Hardcover)
I'm a fan of Barrow's, but this book is repetitive, repetitive, repetitive. It's a collection of pieces he did for various publications and everything in it is said more clearly in Impossibility or Pi in the Sky or others of his stimulating books. Save your money and buy one of those rather than this deflationary rehash.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Marked by Originality of Ideas, October 27, 2000
This review is from: Between Inner Space and Outer Space: Essays on Science, Art, and Philosophy (Hardcover)
This book is a collection of John Barrow's 42 essays mostly published between 1980 and 1998, but none of the topics treated has become out-of-date. Each piece of essay makes a chapter, and all the chapters are grouped into 10 parts. A short introduction in each part clearly sets the theme common to all the chapters of that part as well as the specific subjects of the chapters.

The title of every chapter is quite attractive to those interested in the fundamental problems of physics and cosmology and in their relations to, or a physicist's view of, other disciplines of mathematics, aesthetics and religion. Barrow's writings are sometimes not easy to follow, but are marked by originality of ideas.

For example: In the chapter "Why is the Universe mathematical?" the author first mentions that the sorts of answers depend upon what we think mathematics. Then he puts a puzzle, which is more fundamental in the laws of Nature, symmetry or computation. In the final paragraphs, Barrow states that the science is the search for algorithmic compressions of the world of experience, and comes to the conclusion that mathematics is useful in the description of the physical world because the world is algorithmically compressible. I have difficulty in finding how the earlier paragraphs are related to the last ones. However, the conclusion seems to be simple and persuasive, and would be paraphrased as follows: Mathematics is useful in the description of Nature because she has the characters of orderly complexity.

Only if you haven't read other books by Barrow and want to know his ideas, this would be a good buy.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A collection of writings on popular science, philosophy, the universe, January 6, 2008
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This is a collection of 42 short essays (2 to 15 pages) and book reviews on mathematics, complexity and chaos, the universe and cosmology, physics (main quantum), the arts, religion (as it relates to mathematics and science), and the popularization of science. All except one of the writings have been published previously in fora such as The Times Higher Education Supplement, New Scientist, and The Guardian.
The main problem with the writings, as with science popularization in general, is superficiality: how can one make a balanced description of topics whose full appreciation would require mathematical and other preliminaries worth several years of study? In book-length treatises, the intelligent lay reader can be brought at least roughly up to speed. In short newspaper pieces, such as most of the writings in this book, one can only give an impressionistic sketch of the topic.
An example of this is the (in itself very interesting) finding by Voss and Clarke, described in chapter 24, that many classical and modern music compositions are closely approximated by 1/f noise. Barrow gives as good an explanation of this as can be given under the circumstances. However, in my opinion anything approaching a proper understanding of why this is interesting and how Barrow's implication (that such compositions combine novelty with expectation in an optimal way) holds in a nontrivial way, would require understanding the basics of signals and systems, and Fourier analysis in particular.
This said, the book does succeed within these limitations to give value to at least this reader: it inspires, provokes thought, entertains and in its modest way increases understanding of difficult topics.
Many of the topics handled in the essays are more or less philosophical in nature and thus of permanent interest. It is unlikely that for example the conceptual and existential limits of science treated in chapter 10 will change in the future. What ages (and has aged a bit in the eight years since the publication of this book) is Barrow's reporting from his own field, cosmology. Here, Barrow has succeeded in relaying the excitement of theories and observations in the making, but of course some questions that remained open at the time of writing have later been resolved with e.g. satellite observations.
In my opinion, the best way to enjoy this book is not to read it from cover to cover but rather to take it as a buffet of viewpoints in science. Pick the topics that interest you, read them and feel the taste.
The most potential readership of this book consists of people interested in science and philosophy - preferably both of them.
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