Everything is connectedâ¦
Weâre living in the midst of a scientific revolution thatâs captured the general publicâs attention and imagination. The aim of this new revolution is to develop a âtheory of everythingââa set of laws of physics that will explain all that can be explained, ranging from the tiniest subatomic particle to the universe as a whole. Here, readers will learn the ideas behind the theories, and their effects upon our world, our civilization, and ourselves.
âDespite the crazy title, this is an excellent popular account of string theory. As the astronomer Martin Rees writes in the foreword, âFor aliens, string theory may be a doddle. But for most of us humans, they are a Himalayan challenge.â So, this book is to be welcomed, not only for explaining the physics in an easily assimilated way, but also for articulating why superstrings and the rest of fundamental physics matter at all. This is something that physicists themselves rarely do. Best of all, Musser, a staff editor and writer at Scientific American, tackles the controversial aspects of string theory, which have been the subject of much journalistic nonsense lately, and gets it all just about right.â
âPhysics World, December 2008
â⦠is actually a thoroughly worthwhile read, doing as good a job as you could hope for in reducing the Gordian complexity of string theory into something that intelligent readers feel that they understand.â
âPhysics Education, November 2008
George Musser is a staff editor and writer for Scientific American magazine. He has won a National Magazine Award for editorial excellence and a Global Media Award from the Population Institute.
Imprint: Alpha
Distributor: Penguin Group USA, Inc
Publication Date: 07-01-2008
Pages: 368
Measurements: 9.12in X 7.42in X 0.86in X 1.17lb