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The Night Is Large: Collected Essays, 1938-1995
 
 
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The Night Is Large: Collected Essays, 1938-1995 (Paperback)

by Martin Gardner (Author) "When Blake wrote of the Tyger's "fearful symmetry" he was using the noun as a synonym for beauty..." (more)
Key Phrases: superultimate question, stochastic music, phi sicists, New York, William James, Bertrand Russell (more...)
4.4 out of 5 stars See all reviews (13 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review
Martin Gardner has a knack for wondering about everything. From Alice in Wonderland to supply-side economics, Gardner has spent a lifetime discovering, pondering, and explaining ideas. His essays, most of which appeared in Scientific American and The New York Review of Books, often tackles the big issues--is there a God?--in a language the rest of us can digest. He has the eye to recognize what most people don't and the voice to articulate what many of us can't. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly
The title of Gardner's essays, which are drawn from an output of nearly 60 years, comes from Lord Dunsany's The Laughter of the Gods: "A man is a small thing, and the night is very large and full of wonders." Substitute cosmos for night, and one has the principle behind the contents-a recapitulation, often involving the recycling of already recycled writings, of Gardner's polymath productivity. Recreational wisdom, much of it culled from his columns in Scientific American and reviews in the New York Review of Books, emerges in every essay, but not every essay is for every reader. Many are absorbing, some idiosyncratic, others abstruse. His intellectual heroes are from a variety of pursuits and times: Lewis Carroll, Oz creator L. Frank Baum, philosopher William James, fantasist G.K. Chesterton, mathematician Roger Penrose. Gardner's doghouse is more crowded and includes educator Robert Hutchins and his "Great Books" missionary Mortimer Adler, Sigmund Freud for "an absence of empirical underpinning," Steven Spielberg for his "tooth fairy" Close Encounters of the Third Kind, T.S. Eliot for cramped thinking, Arthur Conan Doyle and dozens of other seemingly intelligent souls for succumbing to spiritualism and other pseudosciences and religious orthodoxies. Also unspared are supply-side economists such as Arthur Laffer, and literary cranks promoting alternative authors of Shakespeare's plays and grubbing for profundities in Finnegans Wake. "My own opinion," he contends, "is that the gullibility of the public today makes citizens of the nineteenth century look like hard-nosed skeptics." Essays are prefaced by background data and postscripted by paragraphs, often amusing, on their reception.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 608 pages
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin (July 15, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312169493
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312169497
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.1 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.9 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #736,182 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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33 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A renaissance man in the third millennium, February 28, 2001
I thoroughly enjoyed this, the definitive collection of Gardner's essays, and recommend it highly. My recommendation, however pales beside those that appear on the book jacket, including praise from Noam Chomsky, Carl Sagan, Stephen Jay Gould, Raymond Smullyan, Arthur C. Clarke, and Stefan Kanfer. Little more need be said about the value of this splendid book; but I would like to offer some observations.

The first chapter, a review of four books on symmetry is easily the most informative and insightful ten pages I have ever read on the subject. Gardner's rare talent for making things clear is shown to such advantage here that I would recommend it as a must read for anyone wanting a career in science writing. It's almost magic, the way he evaporates the fog.

The next nine chapters are on the physical sciences including chapters on relativity, quantum mechanics, time, superstrings, cosmology, etc., all good reads. The next five are on the social sciences, and it is here that I was introduced to a side of Gardner that I had not found in the other three collections of his that I have read. Chapter 11, "Why I Am Not a Smithian," is on economics and is primarily a dissection of the supply-siders who held forth during the Reagan years. It makes for lively reading even though, curiously it turns into a tribute to Norman Thomas as "the only notable American" to vigorously oppose the Japanese internment camps during WW II. In the next essay, "The Laffer Curve," Gardner continues his assault on the "voodoo economics" of the Reagan years as he presents his own satirical "neo-Laffer curve." Gardner is a sharp eyed and sharp-penned social critic, and, as he demonstrates in Chapter 21, "Close Encounters of the Third Kind," a pretty good movie critic as well. (Although here I think he underrated the magic of Spielberg's movie in order to better concentrate on zapping the usual Spielberg schmaltz and pseudoscience.) Politically speaking, Gardner reveals himself as a "social democrat."

The chapter on "Newcomb's Paradox," which Gardner interprets as "related to the question of whether humans possess a genuine power to make free, unpredictable choices," has the effect of revealing Gardner's personality. You'll have to read it to see what I mean, but the choices he makes are psychological choices and reveal him as a man who is not afraid to stand by his beliefs. Herein and in the next chapter we encounter the question of whether we can have free will in the view of an omniscient God. Gardner's solution (with C. S. Lewis and others) is to put God outside time and avoid the contradictions. Incidentally, Gardner makes the very salient point that any language that allows sets to be members of themselves or evaluates the truth or falsity of its statements will run into contradictions (p. 419).

It is here in the chapters on philosophy and religion that Gardner is at his most intriguing. He is a theist and a believer in free will, although he admits that "distinguishing free will from determinism" is something we are incapable of doing (p. 427). He equates free will with self-awareness and consciousness, and declares (p. 444) "I am not a vitalist who thinks there is...a soul distinct from the brain." Yet on page 438 he writes, "I cannot conceive of myself as existing without...a brain that has free will." Although none of this is contradictory, we can see that there is something Gardner believes in that is akin to Bishop Berkeley's idealism and beyond the rock of realism that Samuel Johnson gave a kick to in an attempt to refute Berkeley. I agree with Gardner that we are not about to find an answer to the conundrum of free will, although I think it's important to add that as a practical matter the illusion of free will is, for us, as good as the "real" thing. Readers may be surprised to learn that Gardner also identifies himself as a "fideist," a word I had to look up. It refers to someone who believes in God as a matter of faith.

I would like to say (since Gardner doesn't) that consciousness as self-awareness should be made distinct from consciousness as self-identity. The former is a question of relative complexity, e.g., chimp consciousness versus flatworm consciousness. The latter is an illusion with great psychological power foisted on us by the evolutionary mechanism primarily to make us fear death. It is adaptive for long-lived creatures such as ourselves, but is otherwise empty. When the Buddhists (and the Vedas and yogic psychology) say the ego is an illusion, this is what they are talking about, this delusional self-identity that we sometimes refer to as consciousness.

There are number of funny jokes and asides herein. One of my favorites identifies Ayn Rand (philosophically speaking of course) as "the ugly offspring of Milton Friedman and Madalyn Murray O'Hare" (p. 484).

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Skeptic to the core, December 19, 1999
By David N. Reiss (Haymarket, VA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Gardner is one of the leaders of the American Skeptic movement. (Skeptics (with the capital "S") are those who seriously consider but doubt paranormal phenomenon like UFO's, ESP, and religious faith healers. They want to see if there is good evidence for the stuff and never find it.)

He makes the reader think. He considers the breath and width of human knowledge to all be worth talking and writing about. He is never unforthcoming with his opinions. Naturally, this makes for some controversal opinions coming out. But he lets you know when he blunders as well.

This collection certainly lives up to a testiment that he has had a long life writing and making folks think about the world they live in.

His greatest flaw, in my opinion, is his belief in a god. But then, nobody is ever perfect.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Facinating discussions of a wide variety of subjects., September 29, 1998
One reviewer suggested that Gardner is often wrong. Among those who think he is right are Dr. Stephen Gould and the late Carl Sagen. Whether or not you agree with Gardner's opinions on Freud's early theories, William James' adventures with spiritualists, the existance of God (he is a believer incidentally), you will learn new facts and expand your intellectual horizons--a great book for the intellectually curious.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Large but not, apparently, large enough
The prolific and wide-ranging journalist Martin Gardner has published several collections of essays, but "The Night Is Large" appears to be a selection aimed at reaching people... Read more
Published 10 months ago by Harry Eagar

4.0 out of 5 stars Good Stuff
In general, I very much enjoyed this collection of essays. Gardner is at his most compelling when he writes about science and math. Read more
Published on September 24, 2006 by Librum

5.0 out of 5 stars The Best of the Best by one of the great modern scholars
Truely the greatest of Gardner's views and essays, just open it up at any point and you will find a lucid, witty, and well thought out piece of writing. Read more
Published on August 16, 2004 by socialecologist85

5.0 out of 5 stars Incredible Breadth of Interests
Martin Gardner is a national treasure. His breadth of intellect is astounding. The only problem with reviewing a Gardner volume is deciding which of his collections of essays is... Read more
Published on October 14, 2001 by Bradley P. Rich

5.0 out of 5 stars Gardner's best
This book is made up of 47 fascinating chapters, which really are Gardner's best. If you liked Gardner in SciAm you'll love The Night Is Large.
Published on June 1, 2001 by James R. Jackson

5.0 out of 5 stars Versatile, Lucid, Entertaining!
This diverse collection of forty-six essays written from 1938 to 1995 is a real eye-opener. Gardner is best-known for his mathematical columns in the Scientific American. Read more
Published on November 7, 2000 by Theodore G. Mihran

5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating book on an astonishing variety of topics.
Charming, with chapters such as "The Significance of 'Nothing'" and "The Mystery of Free Will" and "Wilhelm Reich and the Orgone. Read more
Published on August 13, 1999

5.0 out of 5 stars A Journey to the Most Wonderful Places
Gardner's scope is wide, of course. Obviously too wide for some. But for those who enjoy thinking, one finds a kaleidoscope of ideas. Read more
Published on July 15, 1998 by Lance Moody

3.0 out of 5 stars Too much for this humble reviewer.
There are parts of this book that I liked. I think those are the ones about which I have some firsthand knowledge. Read more
Published on January 21, 1998 by The Chalcenteric Kid

2.0 out of 5 stars A great American thinker?
Martin Gardner has been hailed as one of the great thinkers in this country. If that's true, then America must be pretty hopeless. Read more
Published on August 13, 1997

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