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Maps of Time: An Introduction to Big History New Ed Edition

17 customer reviews
ISBN-13: 978-0520244764
ISBN-10: 0520244761
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Product Details

  • Paperback: 664 pages
  • Publisher: University of California Press; New Ed edition (February 1, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0520244761
  • ISBN-13: 978-0520244764
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 1.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #483,254 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

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It is amazing how much knowledge this writer has acquired to present a complete history of not only the world but the universe. The various chapters can be basically reduced to about four topics: the universe, early civilizations, modern civilization, and the future.

As is well known, our now-expanding universe started with the big bang about 13 billion years ago. Our solar system was formed about 4.6 billion years ago from condensing hydrogen. It just happened that solar debris formed a planet at such a distance from the Sun that most water remained liquid. Around 4 billion years ago biological molecules began forming in the hot volcanic beds of the seas of this planet. Plants eventually began growing on land and emitted oxygen as a waste product. Oxygen-breathing animals including us then evolved from this waste.

At the end of the last ice age around 10,000 years ago modern humans began using agriculture by domesticating plants and animals. The first mass civilization, based on irrigation, was developed about 5,000 years ago in Mesopotamia (modern Iraq). This created a cycle of the rise and fall of civilizations where innovation led to population growth, which eventually led to overpopulation with environmental degradation and partial or complete collapse, followed by new innovation and recovery.

Modern civilization began in the 18th century with the Industrial Revolution in England. It really got going after James Watt perfected the steam engine in 1769. This caused world population to explode virtually overnight from about one billion to seven billion today. It was based on rapidly using up fossil fuels which took millions of years to develop. Needless to say this cannot continue forever as these resources are finite.
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Format: Paperback
Of all the books I’ve reviewed on Amazon this is the one that I’ve had most difficulty assigning a rating to. Indeed I began a draft review without deciding on my final rating. This isn’t because I don’t have a settled opinion on the merits of the work but rather because (a) I haven’t read anything really comparable to assess it against, and (b), for me, the book falls into two main parts to which I would assign different ratings.
It sets out to combine a natural history of the universe from the Big Bang onwards with what most of us think of as history, i.e. human history. These two main parts of the work are followed by a kind of epilogue – if that’s the correct term – where the author speculates about what might happen in the near and not-so-near future. This I found somewhat out of keeping with the “just the facts” approach earlier in the book.
As far as I can tell the author does a more than adequate job of the covering the non-human part of the work i.e. the first 13.7 billion years but I think the appeal of this book is its attempt to integrate human history into the history of the universe. In a way it is like an Agatha Christie novel. I don’t think many people read them for their character development, sparkling prose or insights into the human condition. They read them to find out whodunit.
Similarly, if one wants a history of the cosmos then a work by a scientist or professional science writer would probably do a better job. But this book includes a world history i.e. a history of humanity since the emergence of our species and – like the Christie reader who judges the book by the twists in and the ingenuity of the plot – so in the end I gave my rating based on the author’s treatment of human history.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful By Stan Prager on April 17, 2009
Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
I have just completed reading Maps of Time: An Introduction to Big History, by David Christian, and even after more than 500 small-font pages of dense ideas, I inhaled the final section - twin appendices actually - and audibly exhaled a satisfied "Wow."

Maps of Time is one of the most significant books to impact upon my recent intellectual development, if not the most significant. Prior to this book, I was not even aware of the new genre of history known as "Big History". Now - and forever after - I will view everything - and I mean everything - through the prism of Christian's fascinating concepts, which essentially unite all of science and all of human history into a single grand discipline.

Christian launches his opus by promising the reader "a modern creation story" -- sans supernatural creatures - that explains how we got to be the advanced, networked, highly-intelligent 21st century beings reading this book, and he eloquently delivers. So we begin our human history not with the first cities in 3000 BCE or Neolithic villages in 8000 BCE or even the australopithecines circa 3 million years ago, but rather with the Big Bang event itself, some 13 billion years ago.

For the non-scientist, some of the physics concepts are a bit tough - it is difficult for me to "grok" the "theory of inflation," for example, which posits that ". . . for a fraction of a second, between ca.10-34 and 10-32 seconds after the big bang, the universe expanded faster than the speed of light . . . driven apart by some form of antigravity." But the overall ideas are easier to negotiate than with a Stephen Hawking book, and the science does not bog down the text, but rather enlightens it.
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