Collectible Title, Hardcover with dust jacket
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
How will life end?,
By
This review is from: A Choice of Catastrophes (Paperback)
In this book, Asimov explores and analyzes the different ways the world, or civilzation, could end (the "catastrophes") and estimates the likelihood and time frame of each one of them. He goes all the way from the macro-catastrophes (heat death of the universe) to the micro-catastrophes (disease and political turmoil).Very interesting book that brings science and a dose of reality into this consideration of the ultimate demise of mankind.
14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Will humanity overcome?,
By JoH (Antwerp, Belgium) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Choice of Catastrophes (Paperback)
I was pleasantly surprised by this book(Dutch translation). I had never before read Asimov, and although I imagined him as a "serious" science-fiction author, the subject and title of this book made me uncertain about what to expect... Would it go down the popular road of feeding on people's fear? As it turns out, there was no need to worry. Asimov uses a nicely balanced approach to this mass-appeal theme to touch many fields of science and even culture. His message is not one of hysteria, but a message of hope. He presents himself as a true Homo Universalis of our time. Not in the sense that he pretends to know everything about anything, the sort of omni-knowledge that died after the Renaissance. But in the sense that he argues like a true World Citizen. A member of the human race instead of belonging to this or that nation/religion/sex/whatever. Of course, the subject of the book lends itself very well for this. So my impression is that Asimov found it more important to awake this feeling in the readers, than to write a sort of disaster-encyclopedia. The book is meant to assist us in becoming conscious about our position in space and time. About our relation to the past, the future and all the phenomenons in the Universe that completely outscale us in size, violence and duration. It is meant to make us feel tiny and insignificant in one way. But certainly also to unite us in a collective battle against the indifferent laws of nature and evolution.I would recommended this book to anyone with a broad view on the world around us.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
How everything could end.,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: A Choice of Catastrophes: The Disasters That Threaten Our World (Hardcover)
I had read this book years ago and found it fascinating. In this book Azimov goes into exhaustive detail into how the earth and indeed the whole universe could come to an end. He has a chapter on how various religions think about the end of the world. He is mainly concerned though about scientific facts of possible endings.
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