Author: Ferris, Timothy:
ISBN: 0385263260
Description: New York Anchor Books/Doubleday, 1989 8vo softcover 496pp index, b/w illus. very good. From Publishers WeeklynThe ancient Egyptians regarded the sky as a kind of tent canopy. Thirty centuries later, astronomer William Herschel argued that the sun belongs to a huge cluster of stars (a galaxy, as we call it today) and charted great swaths of intergalactic space through a telescope. How the human species slowly awakened to the vast reaches of space and time is the story absorbingly told by popular science writer Ferris (The Red Limit, Galaxies). His narrative humanizes the scientific enterpriseGalileo emerges here as a careerist, and Johannes Kepler as a self-loathing neurotic. Although it covers well-trod ground, this remarkable synthesis makes broad areas of science accessible to the layperson, from Darwin's and Lyell's investigations of the age of the earth to modern physicists' quest for a perfectly symmetrical, hyperdimensional universe. BOMC alternate. nCopyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. nnFrom School Library JournalnYA In the first section, Ferris uses historical anecdotes to relate astronomical discoveries and the foibles of their discoverers in a successful attempt to show the ``big names'' of science as real persons, warts and all. The second section, on the history of space and time, is also well done, if lacking in the human details. The third section, which deals with cosmology and modern physics, uses a philosophical approach to discuss difficult material; the result is not easy to absorb, but it is... read more --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. Book Number: 29844 Keywords: Science Astronomy Astronomy Coming of Age in the Milky Way Ferris Timothy Price: $15.00 (AUD) |
 |
|