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The Order of Time Hardcover – Illustrated, May 8, 2018

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One of TIME’s Ten Best Nonfiction Books of the Decade

"Meet the new Stephen Hawking . . . The Order of Time is a dazzling book." --The Sunday Times

From the bestselling author of Seven Brief Lessons on Physics, Reality Is Not What It Seems, Helgoland, and Anaximander comes a concise, elegant exploration of time.

Why do we remember the past and not the future? What does it mean for time to "flow"? Do we exist in time or does time exist in us? In lyric, accessible prose, Carlo Rovelli invites us to consider questions about the nature of time that continue to puzzle physicists and philosophers alike.

For most readers this is unfamiliar terrain. We all experience time, but the more scientists learn about it, the more mysterious it remains. We think of it as uniform and universal, moving steadily from past to future, measured by clocks. Rovelli tears down these assumptions one by one, revealing a strange universe where at the most fundamental level time disappears. He explains how the theory of quantum gravity attempts to understand and give meaning to the resulting extreme landscape of this timeless world. Weaving together ideas from philosophy, science and literature, he suggests that our perception of the flow of time depends on our perspective, better understood starting from the structure of our brain and emotions than from the physical universe.

Already a bestseller in Italy, and written with the poetic vitality that made
Seven Brief Lessons on Physics so appealing, The Order of Time offers a profoundly intelligent, culturally rich, novel appreciation of the mysteries of time.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Highly original. . . . Chapter by chapter, Rovelli shows how modern physics has annihilated common understandings of time. . . . the many other excellent explanations of science, the heart and humanity of the book, its poetry and its gentle tone raise it to the level and style of such great scientist-writers as Lewis Thomas and Rachel Carson.” Alan Lightman, New York Times Book Review

“ An elegant grapple with one of physics’ deepest mysteries. . . .A masterly writer. . . . In this little gem of a book, Mr. Rovelli first demolishes our common-sense notion of time. . . .an ambitious book that illuminates a thorny question, that succeeds in being a pleasurable read.”
Wall Street Journal

“No one writes about the cosmos like theoretical physicist Carlo Rovelli. . . Rovelli’s new story of time is elegant and lucidly told, whether he is revealing facts or indulging in romantic-philosophic speculation about the nature of time.” —
The Washington Post

“An incredible book. . . [Rovelli] manages to communicate some of the most complex and inspiring ideas we have about time with a poetry, charm and wit that is infectious.” —Benedict Cumberbatch

“Rovelli has crafted an accessible, mind-­expanding read that challenges our perceptions of time, space and reality.” —
TIME

“A deep—and remarkably readable—dive into the fundamental nature of time. . . written with enough charm and poetry to engage the imagination of anyone who reads it.” —
Financial Times 

The Order of Time, by Carlo Rovelli, hardly seems like pool-side reading, but anyone with the least interest in the science of the physical world will be by turns astonished, baffled and thrilled by what Rovelli has to say about the true nature of time, which has little in common with our everyday conception of it. Rovelli is the poet of quantum physics.” —John Banville

“We live in an age of wonderful science writing, and Carlo Rovelli’s new book,
 The Order of Time, is an example of the very best. Time is something we think we know about instinctively; here he shows how profoundly strange it really is.” —Philip Pullman 

“Mind-bending.” —Michael Pollan

“Rovelli is a wonderful writer, and so even when you (or perhaps I should just stick to the first-person singular) don’t know what’s going on, he comes up with enjoyable, occasionally beautiful metaphors to help you (me). . .  The ideas in 
The Order of Time are extraordinary, and I rather fear you should read it” —Nick Hornby, The Believer

“The Order of Time is a little wonder of a book. It provides surprising insights into an increasingly mysterious world, offers warmly humane reflections on our existential condition, and sustains a virtual conversation that will continue long after the reading has ceased.” —PopMatters

“A dizzying, poetic work”
—The Guardian

“A compact and elegant book” —
Nature

“Rovelli, a physicist and one of the founders of loop quantum gravity theory, uses literary, poetical and historical devices to unravel the properties of time, what it means to exist without time and, at the end, how time began.” —
Scientific American

“Physics' literary superstar makes us rethink time . . . 
The Order of Time will surely establish Rovelli among the pantheon of great scientist-communicators . . . More of this please” —New Scientist

“Where other writers struggle to get their complex ideas across, Rovelli introduces profound notions with ease, using simple but evocative language . . . He also has a knack for mixing his serious enterprise with a sense of humor.” —
Science Magazine

“In this fascinating new book, Carlo Rovelli weaves together physics, philosophy, and art to explore the enduring mystery of time itself.” —
Bustle

“An elegantly concise primer makes theoretical physics intelligible . . . it would be to do a disservice to Rovelli and this stunningly written book, to say that brevity is its main virtue.” —
The Times (UK)  

About the Author

Carlo Rovelli is a theoretical physicist who has made significant contributions to the physics of space and time. He has worked in Italy and the United States and currently directs the quantum gravity research group of the Centre de Physique Théorique in Marseille, France. His books, including Seven Brief Lessons on Physics, The Order of Time, and Helgoland, are international bestsellers that have been translated into more than fifty languages.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Riverhead Books; Illustrated edition (May 8, 2018)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 256 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 073521610X
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0735216105
  • Lexile measure ‏ : ‎ 1040L
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 10.4 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.09 x 0.88 x 7.6 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 5,346 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5
5,346 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book brilliant, intelligible to the lay reader, and beautiful. They also describe the book as thought-provoking and fascinating.

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200 customers mention "Readability"159 positive41 negative

Customers find the book brilliant, well-written, and fun. They also say it's eye-opening, not too technical, and stirs their emotions.

"...Beyond writing in an accessible way, Rovelli comes off as very personable. The perfect person to sit down and share a cup of coffee with...." Read more

"...In summary this is a decent and well written book advocating for a particular view of time (or no time) that I happen to think is wrong, but what do..." Read more

"My take on this book with beauty in style of writing style is , fabulous!..." Read more

"...For all these reasons, The Order of Time was one of the most brilliant books I’ve ever read...." Read more

111 customers mention "Complexity"91 positive20 negative

Customers find the book highly thought-provoking, delightful, and approachable for anybody keenly interested in the topic. They also say the book takes a very human approach to discussing time, and stirs their emotions and curiosity.

"...And he brings all of it to bear in this delightful book about time, which, in the end, is life, and everything, including the context in which it..." Read more

"...It really is a very clarifying book with an interesting light on the subject...." Read more

"I enjoyed reading your book. Gives one much to ruminate upon. One comes away with a different perspectives on Time." Read more

"...Glad I didn’t regret it a bit! This book gave me so many insights and thoughts about what’s time really mean...." Read more

A thoroughly enjoyable and easy to understand book
5 Stars
A thoroughly enjoyable and easy to understand book
One day in the future, time travel will be scientifically possible long ago.When I read each chapter of Stephen Hawking's A Brief History of Time, I would often have to put the book down to reflect upon what I had read to try to understand it. Carlo Rovelli's The Order of Time is not like that at all. Rovelli writes in a clear, direct way that makes these complex topics easy to digest. The book did not take long to read. (Do you see what I did there?) I recommend this book for anyone curious about the physics of time.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on May 19, 2018
Carlo Rovelli has the brilliance of Stephen Hawking and Albert Einstein and the communicative skills of Carl Sagan. Otherwise he is an Italian theoretical physicist that specializes in quantum gravity and is a proponent, if not quite an advocate, of loop theory. Beyond that he is a philosopher with a heart for ancient poetry and love.

And he brings all of it to bear in this delightful book about time, which, in the end, is life, and everything, including the context in which it unfolds. It would be in error to suggest that time doesn’t exist, but it would be equally in error to suggest that time is as simple as the continuum we record with our clocks.

What I like most about the book is the fact that Rovelli recognizes that philosophy and science, if not two sides of the same coin, are cousins. He refers to Proust, which few scientists do, and suggests that while reason is among the best tools available for interpreting our “collective delirium,” it is “only an instrument, a pincer.”

The science and the prose are very accessible. You will, however, have to be willing to think abstractly, a skill that in our wired, binary world seems to be greatly dissipating. And he is the first scientist I have read in a while who takes time to explain why the problem is sometimes not the science itself, but the limitations of language. Language is a human construction and has not kept up with our scientific revelation. Which is why theoretical physicists sometimes seem to be speaking another language. If only there was another language that was constructed in the world as we know it today, our communication would be so much easier and our knowledge would expand more rapidly.

It would be impossible to summarize the knowledge contained in this book. You really have to read it. Here is a start, however: “The world is not a collection of things, it is a collection of events.” If you can comprehend that the rest is largely additional perspective.

And if the idea that universal time doesn’t exist in any absolute sense seems a stretch, consider Rovelli’s simple explanation (I’m paraphrasing): People never used to worry about clocks. They worried about the cycle of sunshine and darkness. But that cycle is different in every single village, town, and city on the planet. The cycle varies both east to west and north to south. And back when we used to spend our lives in our little village we didn’t care. But then the scientists and engineers invented trains to take us from one village to the next. And people needed to know when the train left their village. But how can you develop a timetable when every village has its own time? You can’t. But, at the same time, it’s not quite practical to say that the whole world has just one time. Farmers don’t care what the sun is doing in London. They care what it’s doing on their farm. (China actually has no time zones by edict. The entire country is on Beijing time and there are significant practical limitations.) The solution was the time zone, and it’s a compromise. Time zones are a construct and practical in the local sense, but highly inaccurate when talking about the universe. In the language of theoretical physics, they don’t exist.

Eastern philosophers believe that reality is not knowable. It is real, but is made up of an infinite number of variables. We can only comprehend or think about a handful at a time. A tree is real. I can touch it and smell it. But it is not entirely knowable because there are too many variables (e.g. altitude, climate, soil, etc.) that define each tree for me to know them all. Time is the same way. Time is real but it is not knowable. Throw in the limitations of language and it begins to look like an illusion.

To his great credit, Rovelli admits that there is much we don’t know. Think of a Seurat painting that has been blacked out. We have exposed a few, perhaps 10% (my number), of the original dots of pigment. It’s a lot, but we’re still guessing as to what the underlying picture is.

And that’s pretty exciting. The key to our understanding to date, however, is the second law of thermodynamics which states that entropy can never decrease. It’s critical to our understanding of time, as Rovelli explains. Personally I’m not convinced it’s inviolate. Perhaps we just haven’t uncovered enough dots of pigment yet. If entropy could work both ways it would explain a lot, but attraction does not equal fact. (Entropy obviously has a big role in causality, of course. Bidirectional entropy would be a huge boost for inductive reason.)

It’s a short book and even if you get through a small amount of it you will learn a lot. Beyond writing in an accessible way, Rovelli comes off as very personable. The perfect person to sit down and share a cup of coffee with. If only he had the time. (Sorry)

A marvelous book that I highly recommend.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2018
Like consciousness, time is a subject that no philosopher or physicist has ever managed to nail down completely. Thanks to their slippery character, being so close to us (the first one IS us) they are endless sources for fountains of speculation. In this book, Rovelli's subject is time, but consciousness comes into this narrative as well.

Rovelli is a "time denier". OK, that's being a little unfair but not by much. What he denies is that there exists an independent, fundamental property or quality of the universe that is time. Of course the universe is full of movement and change, events unfolding into other events. His basic position is that time emerges into our perspective, our viewpoint, from these phenomena, but it is merely an illusion. The movement is real, the changing is real, but the time in which all of this seems to occur is nothing more than a manifestation of human (possibly animal) mind and the illusion, in turn, is supported by the entropy generated in the functioning of our brains.

The book (not long read) is divided into three parts. In the first Rovelli covers the various sub-disciplines of physics and their temporal implications (or lack thereof). He begins with classical physics (the equations work backwards in time), and moves on to General and Special Relativity, and quantum mechanics. Here he demonstrates that our simple intuition of a universal time flowing from past to future is untenable. Time, mind-independent time, if it exists at all, cannot be like that. In part two he further demolishes time. Not only is it not what we think, in and for physics, it doesn't really exist at all; even the present is an illusion! In part three, he puts time back together for and in the perspective of an subjective viewpoint.

He argues it is the fact that we view the world from a perspective, that when we perceive the world we inevitably blur the details into a sort of summary or gestalt for our perspective, that causes time to appear to mind, The physics supporting that appearance comes down to thermodynamics. Human time, brain time, is "thermal time". Certainly Rovelli thinks thermodynamics (in particular the 2nd law) is real, but while responsible for what consciousness perceives of time and so a real enough subjective experience, from the 3rd party perspective of physics, change is real, but time is a mirage.

This book is written for a lay audience. There is almost no math in it (what there is appears in footnotes), and it defends a view common to much of the physics and philosophy community. To be sure Rovelli differs a bit from some of his peers. He argues that relativistic "block time" is no more a "true portrait of objective time" than any other theory. In Rovelli's view remember there is no such thing as "objective time".

In 2015 a philosopher (Roberto Unger) and a physicist (Lee Smolin) wrote "The Singular Universe and the Reality of Time". This book (reviewed by me on Amazon) makes precisely the opposite case from that of Rovelli. Of course they recognize what Relativity and quantum mechanics imply about time, but they maintain, nevertheless, that a notion (and reality) of objective, "universal time", is more fundamental than any other phenomena of the universe, even more than space! Rovelli mentions this book in a footnote and admits that Unger and Smolin's view "is defensible", but he leaves it there and never addresses what is defensible about it.

The Unger/Smolin book goes against the grain of 95% of today's physicists. Personally I agree with Smolin and Unger. The fact (thanks to limiting effect of the speed of light) that we cannot map our present to any present in a remote galaxy, or even the nearest star does not mean there is no present there, in fact everywhere. Something is happening, NOW, everywhere in the universe. We do not know what it is, but that does not mean the present isn't real as Rovelli believes. Had Rovelli directly addressed Unger and Smolin I would have given this book another star. Had he not mentioned them at all, I would have taken another away.

In summary this is a decent and well written book advocating for a particular view of time (or no time) that I happen to think is wrong, but what do I know? It happens to be the dominant view in physics today. Rovelli is a well respected physicist and a good writer. Those of you interested in the subject will find this book valuable whether you agree with the author or not.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 4, 2018
My take on this book with beauty in style of writing style is , fabulous! As I read it my mind wandered to the thoughts of how our instruments of war, bombs, atomic, hydrogen and all kinds of incendiary weapons cause entropy. When we bomb someone with hate, malice and evil , does that too, cause entropy? Rovelli says , page 155 , “the world is a collection of events not ordered in time’” as he goes on about this, I wondered about the unfolding recent events that were so horrifying as we vetted a candidate for the Supreme Court these past few weeks and thought , how will this affect our future? Rovelli continues, “each part of the world interacted with a small part of all the variables, the value of which determines ‘ the state of the world’ “. Now, my mind turned to the Macarthy hearings that were on everyday when I came home from school. At first they seemed like they were patriotic , but then they took a turn , lives were destroyed! These were events that formed memories, that formed my reaction to the events now before us as we await a new Supreme Court judge. I asked my husband would you do what Dr Ford did, did her events in life allow her to finger Judge Cavanagh without full secure knowledge that it was him? Did her chosen life events of going back and back to wild parties free her from responsibility and give her the license and certainty to say, he is responsible for my trauma? Questions we all must ponder as we probe this mystery of life. We search for love in life, giving and receiving. What affect does our world register when we spawn evil and hate in the guise of what, of getting even? Is there any such event as getting even or is that making entropy in the world? A book that gives us many thoughts of evaluation for our own events and those unfolding before us.

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Britany
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent read
Reviewed in Canada on April 20, 2024
A great read from a physicist whose passion for physics reads like a poet.
Gabriel Moises
5.0 out of 5 stars Obra genial de un científico empujando la frotera del conocimiento.
Reviewed in Mexico on January 20, 2023
Carlo Rovelli ademas de ser un físico que trabaja en lo mas avanzado de la ciencia, es un filósofo y un estudioso del arte y de la historia.
Sus obras científicas son una delicia para la mente, pues están salpicadas de referencias al arte, a la belleza, a la historia y a la filosofía.
Puedes aprender sobre las teorías de mas avanzadas de la física disfrutando la prosa amena de este genio.
Cuando termines su lectura pensarás que este libro era muy breve y que se terminó como un bocado del mas delicioso pastel.
K P Vineeth
5.0 out of 5 stars Different perspective
Reviewed in India on May 29, 2024
The book deals more about time and entropy. A great explanation on difference between past, present and future. Easy to understand.
Thiago Dalfovo
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book!!
Reviewed in Sweden on February 2, 2024
Carlo has a way with words. Amazing book: Interesting and easy to follow.
Lucio
5.0 out of 5 stars Libro di interesse straordinario
Reviewed in Italy on January 11, 2024
Questo è un testo affascinante, scritto in maniera semplice ma molto profondo.