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A Universe from Nothing: Why There Is Something Rather than Nothing, in englischer Sprache Taschenbuch – 1. Januar 2013

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Bestselling author and acclaimed physicist Lawrence Krauss offers a paradigm-shifting view of how everything that exists came to be in the first place.

“Where did the universe come from? What was there before it? What will the future bring? And finally, why is there something rather than nothing?”

One of the few prominent scientists today to have crossed the chasm between science and popular culture, Krauss describes the staggeringly beautiful experimental observations and mind-bending new theories that demonstrate not only can something arise from nothing, something will
always arise from nothing. With a new preface about the significance of the discovery of the Higgs particle, A Universe from Nothing uses Krauss’s characteristic wry humor and wonderfully clear explanations to take us back to the beginning of the beginning, presenting the most recent evidence for how our universe evolved—and the implications for how it’s going to end.

Provocative, challenging, and delightfully readable, this is a game-changing look at the most basic underpinning of existence and a powerful antidote to outmoded philosophical, religious, and scientific thinking.

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Pressestimmen

"In A Universe from Nothing, Lawrence Krauss has written a thrilling introduction to the current state of cosmology—the branch of science that tells us about the deep past and deeper future of everything. As it turns out, everything has a lot to do with nothing—and nothing to do with God. This is a brilliant and disarming book."-- Sam Harris, author of The Moral Landscape

"Astronomers at the beginning of the twentieth century were wondering whether there was anything beyond our Milky Way Galaxy. As Lawrence Krauss lucidly explains, astronomers living two trillion years from now, will perhaps be pondering precisely the same question! Beautifully navigating through deep intellectual waters, Krauss presents the most recent ideas on the nature of our cosmos, and of our place within it. A fascinating read."

-- Mario Livio, author of
Is God A Mathematician? and The Golden Ratio

"In this clear and crisply written book, Lawrence Krauss outlines the compelling evidence that our complex cosmos has evolved from a hot, dense state and how this progress has emboldened theorists to develop fascinating speculations about how things really began."
-- Martin Rees, author of
Our Final Hour

“A series of brilliant insights and astonishing discoveries have rocked the Universe in recent years, and Lawrence Krauss has been in the thick of it. With his characteristic verve, and using many clever devices, he’s made that remarkable story remarkably accessible. The climax is a bold scientific answer to the great question of existence: Why is there something rather than nothing.”

-- Frank Wilczek, Nobel Laureate and Herman Feshbach professor at MIT, author of
The Lightness of Being

"With characteristic wit, eloquence and clarity Lawrence Krauss gives a wonderfully illuminating account of how science deals with one of the biggest questions of all: how the universe's existence could arise from nothing. It is a question that philosophy and theology get themselves into muddle over, but that science can offer real answers to, as Krauss's lucid explanation shows. Here is the triumph of physics over metaphysics, reason and enquiry over obfuscation and myth, made plain for all to see: Krauss gives us a treat as well as an education in fascinating style."
--A. C. Grayling, author of
The Good Book

"We have been living through a revolution in cosmology as wondrous as that initiated by Copernicus. Here is the essential, engrossing and brilliant guide."

--Ian McEwan

“Nothing is not nothing. Nothing is something. That's how a cosmos can be spawned from the void -- a profound idea conveyed in
A Universe From Nothing that unsettles some yet enlightens others. Meanwhile, it's just another day on the job for physicist Lawrence Krauss.”
-- Neil deGrasse Tyson, Astrophysicist, American Museum of Natural History

"Lively and humorous as well as informative… As compelling as it is intriguing.” ―
Publishers Weekly

“[An] excellent guide to cutting-edge physics… It is detailed but lucid, thorough but not stodgy… [an] insightful book… Space and time can indeed come from nothing; nothing, as Krauss explains beautifully. …
A Universe From Nothing is a great book: readable, informative and topical.” -- New Scientist

"Krauss possesses a rare talent for making the hardest ideas in astrophysics accessible to the layman, due in part to his sly humor… one has to hope that this book won't appeal only to the partisans of the culture wars – it's just too good and interesting for that. Krauss is genuinely in awe of the "wondrously strange" nature of our physical world, and his enthusiasm is infectious.” -- San Francisco Chronicle, Huffington Post, AP

“How physicists came up with the current model of the cosmos is quite a story, and to tell it in his elegant
A Universe From Nothing, physicist Lawrence Krauss walks a carefully laid path… It would be easy for this remarkable story to revel in self-congratulation, but Krauss steers it soberly and with grace… His asides on how he views each piece of science and its chances of being right are refreshingly honest…unstable nothingness, as described by Krauss… is also invigorating for the rest of us, because in this nothingness there are many wonderful things to see and understand.” -- Nature

"In
A Universe From Nothing, Lawrence Krauss, celebrated physicist, speaker and author, tackles all that plus a whole lot else. In fewer than 200 pages, he delivers a spirited, fast-paced romp through modern cosmology and its strong underpinnings in astronomical observations and particle physics theory.Krauss’s slim volume is bolder in its premise and more ambitious in its scope than most. He makes a persuasive case that the ultimate question of cosmic origin – how something, namely the universe, could arise from nothing – belongs in the realm of science rather than theology or philosophy." -- Globe & Mail

“An
eloquent guide to our expanding universe… There have been a number of fine cosmology books published recently but few have gone so far, and none so eloquently, in exploring why it is unnecessary to invoke God to light the blue touchpaper and set the universe in motion.”
-- Financial Times

"His arguments for the birth of the universe out of nothingness from a physical, rather than theological, beginning not only are logical but celebrate the wonder of our natural universe. Recommended." -- Library Journal

“Krauss possesses a rare talent for making the hardest ideas in astrophysics accessible to the layman, due in part to his sly humor… one has to hope that this book won't appeal only to the partisans of the culture wars – it's just too good and interesting for that. Krauss is genuinely in awe of the "wondrously strange" nature of our physical world, and his enthusiasm is infectious.” -- Associated Press

"With its mind-bending mechanics, Krauss argues, our universe may indeed have appeared from nowhere, rather than at the hands of a divine creator. There's some intellectual heavy lifting here—Einstein is the main character, after all—but the concepts are articulated clearly, and the thrill of discovery is contagious. 'We are like the early terrestrial mapmakers,' Krauss writes, puzzling out what was once solely the province of our imaginations." -- Mother Jones

"The author delivers plenty of jolts in this enthusiastic and lucid but demanding overview of the universe, which includes plenty of mysteries—but its origin isn’t among them. A thoughtful, challenging book." -- Kirkus

"People always say you can't get something from nothing. Thankfully, Lawrence Krauss didn't listen. In fact, something big happens to you during this book about cosmic nothing, and before you can help it, your mind will be expanding as rapidly as the early universe." -- Sam Kean, author of The Disappearing Spoon

"A very interesting read from a foremost physicist of our time." -- Santa Barbara Independent

Über die Autorenschaft und weitere Mitwirkende

Lawrence Krauss, a renowned theoretical physicist, is the president of The Origins Project Foundation and host of the Origins Podcast. He is the author of more than 300 scientific publications and nine books—including the bestselling The Physics of Star Trek—and the recipient of numerous international awards for his research and writing. Hailed by Scientific American as a “rare scientific public intellectual,” he is also a regular columnist for newspapers and magazines and appears frequently on radio and television.

Produktinformation

  • Herausgeber ‏ : ‎ Atria Books; 33851st Edition (1. Januar 2013)
  • Sprache ‏ : ‎ Englisch
  • Taschenbuch ‏ : ‎ 240 Seiten
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1451624468
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1451624465
  • Artikelgewicht ‏ : ‎ 212 g
  • Abmessungen ‏ : ‎ 1.27 x 14.73 x 25.91 cm
  • Kundenrezensionen:
    4,4 4,4 von 5 Sternen 4.131 Sternebewertungen

Informationen zum Autor

Folge Autoren, um Neuigkeiten zu Veröffentlichungen und verbesserte Empfehlungen zu erhalten.
Lawrence M. Krauss
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I was born in New York City and shortly afterward moved to Toronto, spending my childhood in Canada. I received undergraduate degrees in mathematics and physics from Carleton University in Ottawa Canada, and my Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1982.

After three year a stint in the Harvard Society of Fellows, I was a professor at Yale University for eight years and then, when I was 38 I moved to become Ambrose Swasey Professor of Physics, professor of astronomy, and Chairman of the Physics Department at Case Western Reserve University. Since then I have held endowed positions at a variety of Universities around the world in departments ranging from physics and astronomy, to earth and space exploration.I retired from academia in 2019 at age 65 when I became President of The Origins Project Foundation, (www.originsprojectfoundation.org) and independent non-profit foundation furthering the public understanding of science, and enhancing connections between science and culture. In the same year I became host of The Origins Podcast with Lawrence M. Krauss (www.theoriginspodcast.com), where I have extended video dialogues with the most interesting people in the world.

My research focuses on the beginning and end of the Universe. Among my contributions to the field of cosmology, I helped lead the search for dark matter, and proposed the existence of dark energy in 1995, three years before its observational discovery, which received the Nobel Prize in 2011.

I write regularly for national media, including The New York Times, The New Yorker, the Wall St. Journal, The Globe and Mail, The National Post, Quillette, Prospect, and other magazines, as well as doing extensive work on radio and television and most recently in feature films.

I am strongly committed to public understanding of science, and have helped lead the national effort to preserve sound science teaching, including the teaching of evolution, for which I was awarded the National Science Board's Award for the Public Understanding of Science. I also served on Barack Obama's 2008 Presidential campaign science policy committee. I was honored to be Chair of the Board of Sponsors of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists from 2006-2018, and from 2010-2019 was on the Board of Directors of the Federation of American Scientists.

I became a scientist in part because I read books by other scientists, such as Albert Einstein, George Gamow, Sir James Jeans, etc, when I was a child, and was inspired meeting various scientist-heroes including Richard Feynman and my popular writing returns the favor. One of my greatest joys is when a young person comes up to me and tells me that one of my books motivated them to become a scientist.

I believe science is not only a vital part of our culture, but is fun, and I try and convey that in my books and lectures. I am honored that Scientific American referred to me as a rare scientific public intellectual, and that all three three major US Physics Societies: the American Physical Society, the American Association of Physics Teachers, and the American Institute of Physics, have seen fit to honor me with their highest awards for research and writing.

I have now written 12 popular books on various aspects of science and culture, including the two New York Times Bestsellers, The Physics of Star Trek, and A Universe from Nothing. These two books sold over 500,000 copies in English alone and the latter was translated into 25 languages.

My last book, The Physics of Climate Change, was published in March 2021. I wrote it during the pandemic, when I was able to take time to fully immerse myself in updating my knowledge of climate science and trying to translate it into popular language. This book cuts through the confusion by succinctly presenting the underlying science of climate change. It presents the underlying science behind climate change, free of political bias, or jargon so that all readers can understand one of the most important issues of our time, and allows laypeople to assess which climate predictions are firmest and which are more speculative . A departure from much of the focus of my previous books, it addresses a timely issue that should impact on the basis of ongoing public policy.

My newest book, The Edge of Knowledge: Unsolved Mysteries of the Cosmos (in the UK it is entitled The Known Unknowns: The Unsolved Mysteries of the Cosmos) is a roller coaster ride taking us to the limits of what we know, and more importantly, what we know we don't know about the Universe. Divided into 5 sections: Time, Space, Matter, Life, and Consciousness, it takes the greatest unsolved problems in science. It is a celebration of how far we have come in understanding the universe, while providing an invitation to the next generation of young people to take up the challenge. The Universe continues to surprise us, but it will only do that if we keep asking questions, and keep exploring it. The rewards are ultimately a better understanding of our own place in the cosmos, including where we came from, and where we are heading.

When not writing or doing research or relaxing at home with my family, I love to mountain bike, fly fish, and scuba dive.

You can find more about my research, my activities, and my opinions on my substack site Critical Mass at LawrenceKrauss.substack.com or web page lawrencemkrauss.com or on my twitter feed @Lkrauss1 or at https://wakelet.com/@LawrenceKrauss

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An explore into the universe is intense 🥰🔥
5 von 5 Sternen
An explore into the universe is intense 🥰🔥
Still exploring what’s out there, but as it gets more in detail. It gets challenging yet so fun. Discovering the sky, stars, trying to find nebula and supernova even before passing through quarter of the book. And the best part is I haven’t found the moon yet 🤪. It just kept bringing questions out of me. So decided to look int the sky to get a better picture of what’s really said. Because as the author said pictures speak a thousand more words compared the writings.
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  • Bewertet in den USA am11. Januar 2012
    A Universe from Nothing by Lawrence M. Krauss

    "A Universe from Nothing" is the fascinating book about how our universe came from nothing. Using the latest in scientific knowledge, his expertise and the innate ability to explain very complex topics in accessible manner earns this book five stars. Lawrence Krauss takes us on an exciting voyage of discovery that helps us understand the universe and further whets our appetite for more knowledge. This 224-page book is composed of the following eleven chapters: 1. A Cosmic Mystery Story: Beginnings, 2. A Cosmic Mystery Story: Weighing the Universe, 3. Light from the Beginning of Time, 4. Much Ado About Nothing, 5. The Runaway Universe, 6. The Free Lunch at the End of the Universe, 7. Our Miserable Future, 8. A Grand Accident?, 9. Nothing Is Something, 10. Nothing Is Unstable, and 11. Brave New Worlds.

    Positives:
    1. This book is truly something! A page turner.
    2. A thought-provoking, inspirational quest for knowledge...I loved it!
    3. A profound book that is intelligible. An achievement in its own right. Very complex topics accessible to the masses. Thank you.
    4. Elegant prose with conviction. Lucid and clarity in a world of dark matter.
    5. A journey of cosmological discoveries.
    6. Effective use of charts and illustrations.
    7. I have a much better understanding of our universe as a result of this book and most importantly it has only whet my appetite for even more knowledge...and that's why I read.
    8. A love affair with science and for good reason. The three key principles of scientific ethos.
    9. Startling conclusions are presented. The author does a wonderful job of letting us know what we do know versus what we don't know.
    10. Some of the greatest discoveries presented.
    11. I finally have a reasonable grasp of the Big Bang, Bazinga! The three main observational pillars.
    12. Of course you will get to hear about the greats of science but I really appreciate the stories of the lesser known scientists who provided vital knowledge, such as, the story of Henrietta Swan Leavitt and Vera Rubin. Bravo!
    13. Great facts spruced throughout the book and some jaw-dropping insight. One scientist was able to defend his mother in a witchcraft trial...find out whom.
    14. What general relativity tells us.
    15. The uses for gravitational lensing. Let's get Zwicky with it.
    16. Dark matter and dark energy...enlighten me. Or at least try.
    17. Quantum mechanics, I will never understand it but I can appreciate it what it provides.
    18. The author does a good job of telling us what scientific progress has been made and how that applies to cosmology.
    19. A flat universe?? Find out.
    20. An explanation of nothing that means something to me. Can you say quantum fluctuations?
    21. A "creator" in proper perspective. The requirement of some externality. Read it and you will understand.
    22. Multiverses...oh my.
    23. String theory a critical view.
    24. A little bit of philosophy for good measure.
    25. The best explanation for how something can come out of nothing to best current knowledge available.
    26. Key concepts will now become part of your understanding..."the existence of energy in empty space".
    27. Black holes under the light and some very interesting takes.
    28. Spoiler alert...one of the most profound questions, "What I want to know is whether God had any choice in the creation of the universe." Thank you, Mr. Einstein.
    29. An interesting look at Aristotle and the First Cause in the light of new knowledge.
    30. The book ends with a bang of reality.

    Negatives:
    1. No links or bibliography.
    2. A lot of the concepts of this book are hard to grasp. Some readers may not have the patience and inclination to take the time to properly digest what is being offered. That being said, the author does wonders in making such difficult concepts accessible.

    In summary, this is a fantastic book, a real treat. I learned so much and admire the author for providing a book that is accessible and enjoyable to the masses. This book lived up to my expectations. Fascinating topics in the hands of a master results in a captivating book. This is how science books should be written. I can't recommend this book enough!

    Further suggestions: "The Quantum Universe: (And Why Anything That Can Happen, Does)" and "Why Does E=mc2?: (And Why Should We Care?)" by Brian Cox, "Quantum Man: Richard Feynman's Life in Science (Great Discoveries)" also by Lawrence Krauss, "Nothing: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions)" by Frank Close, "Knocking on Heaven's Door: How Physics and Scientific Thinking Illuminate the Universe and the Modern World" by Lisa Randall, and "The Grand Design" by Stephen Hawking.
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  • Bewertet in den USA am25. Oktober 2013
    I greatly enjoyed reading A Universe From Nothing, and found it to be scientifically clear and very well written -- but in my view the book glossed over too quickly the profound philosophical implications of modern cosmology. The afterward by Richard Dawkins suffered the same shortcoming.

    The book prompted me to watch Krauss' Sept. 11, 2011 talk posted on Youtube that briefly summarized the key ideas. Krauss' side-comments during the talk, as well as the introduction by Richard Dawkins, again declared in which philosophical camp they wished to pitch their tent. But I worry that the elegant scientific concepts summarized do not so clearly lead to that depressing existential position. Krauss jokingly shared his view of the human situation near the start of his talk when he remarked that he had considered using the title, We Are All Fu..ed! Humorous, but is it true?

    The eminent philosopher Bertrand Russell (1872-1970) was a bit more poetic in his choice of language as he wrote in 1903 of humanity's desperate situation (I quote from a rendition published by Augros and Stanciu in The New Story of Science (1984), an interesting book but one with major flaws of its own):

    "That man is the product of causes which had no provision of the end they were achieving; that his origins, his growth, his hopes and fears, his loves and beliefs are but the outcome of accidental collocations of atoms; that no fire, no heroism, no intensity of thought and feeling, can preserve an individual life beyond the grave; that all the labors of the ages, all the devotion ... all the noonday brightness of human genius are destined to extinction ... all these things, if not quite beyond dispute, are yet so nearly certain, that no philosophy which rejects them can hope to stand. Only within the scaffolding of these truths, only on the firm foundation of unyielding despair, can the soul's habitation henceforth be safely built."

    In sum, in his book Krauss wonderfully recounts in an approachable style the key concepts of modern cosmology, but falls with rather startling self-certainty into the depressing philosophical notions voiced by Russell more than a century ago. Krauss was a bit more flexible in his Youtube talk when for one brief moment he showed one slide and remarked about the element of mystery in all this. But he radically undervalues this element. As I will explain, mystery is fundamental in view of a necessary first logical but unprovable step required in all complex arguments.

    In spite of the keen desire by Krauss and Dawkins to be, I presume, purely rational scientists untainted by wishful thinking, these sorts of truly strong scientific intellectuals must recognize that any argument must begin with one or a few key unproven assumptions -- this is unavoidable. As has been elegantly proven by Kurt Gödel (1906-1978), no complex system of thought, even formal mathematics, can be built up from scratch and be internally fully consistent without resort to at least one external assumption or definition that cannot be definitively proven within that complex system. This is Gödel's water-tight "incompleteness theorem" (1931), and its surprising truth has to do with the contradictions necessarily encountered regarding self-referential sets. Descartes (1596-1650), for example, in his Discourse on the Methods (1637) began with the fundamental proposition, "I think, therefore I am." When considering the modern "Theory of Mind," to cite another example, one could propose that a human person is in reality just an isolated brain floating in an oxygenated physiologic solution in a vast alien experiment, and all mental experiences, sensations, interactions with other persons, etc. result from a gigantic simulation --- other persons actually have no minds at all. Alternatively, even though we cannot prove that other persons exist and have independent minds, we can reasonably assume that that is truly the case, and move ahead from there as we try to grasp "reality."

    Coming to unavoidable unprovable assumptions related to cosmology, which sorts of assumptions make most sense? In science we often resort to Occam's razor -- the principle of parsimony: an explanation should be as simple as possible until a somewhat more complex explanation is actually required to fit with the facts. Krauss along with modern cosmologists seem to find that all the mass and energy in the universe apparently sum to zero, and the argument is convincing and, I think, probably true. And he also invokes a sort of anthropic principle: that humans exist because in this present universe, as opposed to many other unfavorable universes, the natural laws crystalized in forms that made human beings physically possible. But is this parsimonious? There certainly is a heavy burden of "specialness" if one believes that there has been only a single universe, this is it, and it is exactly perfect so that intelligent beings can exist and evolve. But there may be arguably an even more heavy burden to the alternative view favored by Krauss; that there are billions of parallel universes -- the "multi-verse" --- or perhaps billions of sequential universes. Krauss thinks that in nearly all of these many universes the conditions were not right for sentient beings, but in at least one very rare case, a universe came into existence that made life possible. So has there been only one universe that is unique and special, or have there been billions of random universes? My belief is that, at the present time, reasonable persons have no basis by which to settle definitively which of these assumptions is the closest to the truth. Moreover, my intuition is that it is precisely this question that is the crux of the fundamental unprovable assumption that we must make when thinking about the ultimate meaning of life -- or lack thereof. In view of Gödel, it is fully scientific and allowed for each person to consider and to make this choice of a key starting assumption, and then thereafter one must logically develop a consistent world view based on observed facts. Perhaps I am wrong, but I believe that Krauss and Dawkins should carefully think about this. Gödel is the key.

    A particular aspect of Krauss' argument bothers me, however. The billions of universes are supposedly arising from nothing, and actually are nothing since in each universe the total mass and energy sums to zero. But Krauss invokes that this is possible because within quantum nothingness there are virtual particles that are rapidly entering and exiting existence. But if there is truly nothing, then how do the newly formed virtual particles "know" what characteristics to briefly assume? Must there not be "laws" to guide them? In other words, it appears that there may be "several types of nothing" -- one type is seething with virtual particles of certain types that are rapidly appearing and disappearing, but I am interested really in another type of nothing -- absolutely nothing, lacking even in the virtual particles. Can there be different types of nothing? This calls to mind the work of the German mathematician Georg Cantor (1845-1918), the expert in set theory, who proved that there were different types of infinity. He showed, for example, that the real numbers are "more numerous" than the natural numbers, even though both are infinite.

    Thus, my view, in agreement with Arthur Stanley Eddington's (1882-1944) famous essay The Decline of Determinism (1935), is that we do not live in a "billiard ball" deterministic universe. Quantum mechanics allows for indeterminism, and also, in my view, free will. I tried to make such a case in my brief essay The Inherent Uncertainty of Nature Is a Basis for Religion published in The Scientist in December, 1988. Various influences that shaped my thinking have been described in a book, Chess Juggler (2011). I'll admit to being influenced over the years also by the profound insights of the philosopher Mortimer Adler (1902-2001) -- one of his many books was How to Think About God (1980). Even Isaac Newton (1642-1727) reflected philosophically in his Opticks (1704) that he wanted to learn "Whence it is that Nature doth nothing in vain; and whence arises all that Order and Beauty which we see in the World." Let me close with what the naturalist and anthropologist Loren Eiseley (1907-1977) wrote in The Immense Journey, "Rather, I would say that if `dead' matter has reared up this curious landscape of fiddling crickets, song sparrows, and wondering men, it must be plain to even the most devoted materialist that the matter of which he speaks contains amazing, if not dreadful powers, and may not impossibly be, as Hardy has suggested, `But one mask of many worn by the Great Face behind.'"
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  • RR Waller
    5,0 von 5 Sternen Great insight into existence.
    Bewertet in Großbritannien am 14. November 2024
    King Lear, to his cost, tells us “Nothing will come of Nothing”. Krauss deals with nothing less than our entire Universe and all universes beyond to explain the opposite.

    EDITION: Free Press, hardcover, 2012 - ISBN 978-14516-2445-8

    Krauss tackles some of the most challenging questions: the origin of our Universe, what existed before, its likely future and why we have something rather than nothing.

    “In the interests of disclosure right at the outset I must admit that I am not sympathetic to the conviction that creation requires a creator …”. P.xi With that starting point, Krauss begins his detailed exploration and recording of humanity’s investigations. It is not an anti-religion text but one rooted in science - theoretical and practical. Such is his skill as a scientist, scientific historian and author that he manages to explain some of the most complex areas of science in simpler terms, making them more accessible to the non-scientist.

    The Nobel Prize winning, unintended discovery of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMBR) he explains as follows: “If one considers a distance spanning 1 degree on the last scattering surface as seen by an observer on Earth, this would correspond to a distance on that surface of 300,000 light-years. Now, since that last scattering surface reflects a time when the universe itself was about 300,000 years old, and since Einstein tells us that no information can travel through space faster than the speed of light, this means that no signal from one location could travel across this surface at that time more than about 300,000 light-years.”The CMBR, discovered by accident, is our eyes into the past, a Universe-wide remnant of our beginnings, the unintended consequence of another experiment..

    Krauss deals with the consequences of the previously known cosmological models for the future, especially since the author was involved in some of these works. Taking into account the role of Dark Energy, the prospects for the next trillion years are gloomy: space is getting dark, but even the clues of the Big Bang, like the background radiation, will slowly disappear.

    Krauss points it that with the advance of science and cosmological understanding, we are answering questions which, one hundred years ago could not have been formulated.

    “Isaac Newton, perhaps the greatest physicist of all time profoundly changed the way we think about the Universe in many ways. But, perhaps, the most important contribution he made was to demonstrate that possibility that the entire Universe is explicable.” P. 141)

    All the great names, theories, cul-de-sacs and freeways to knowledge are contained in his well-penned book. Our journey, whatever the outcome, provides its own reward. His writing conveys the journey of scientists and their attempts and successes to explain the Universe in which we live and those “empty” universes our technological advances provide us with eyes to see right back to the beginning of time.

    When it challenges reading, stay with it. It is worth the struggle.
  • Sandra P.
    5,0 von 5 Sternen Mind blowing
    Bewertet in Spanien am 25. August 2021
    Some of the concepts in this book are mindblowing! I absolutely enjoyed it and couldn't put it down. Concepts that are hard to grasp are explained in an understandable way. The whole multiverse theory is extremely fascinating I find and I want to know more. Overall a wonderful book! I learned a lot.
  • Ivan B.
    5,0 von 5 Sternen Bello
    Bewertet in Italien am 11. Oktober 2019
    bello, intrigante, spiegato bene, forse un po' concitato in alcuni passaggi. Il problema di questi libri è che sono talmente DENSI di contenuti che tutto quello che leggi subito dopo sembra una stupidata.
    Ci sono passaggi anche molto amari, la mazzata finale ti arriva con la conclusione di Dawkins (che conferma l'inquietudine)
  • Nosey Universe
    5,0 von 5 Sternen Awesome book
    Bewertet in Indien am 30. Juni 2019
    This was my first book that I bought in order to understand the universe and I found this book so useful and very informative. If you want to know how the universe bigins, go for this book because book is written in very lucid way.
  • Amazon Customer
    5,0 von 5 Sternen A Great Read
    Bewertet in Australien am 10. Juli 2024
    Very well written - imaginative and thought provoking: an excellent book