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The End of Discovery
Book

The End of Discovery

Are We Approaching the Boundaries of the Knowable?

Oxford UP, 2010 more...


Editorial Rating

7

Qualities

  • Background

Recommendation

This is an ambitious yet accessible book that spans the universe from its creation to yesterday and includes pretty much everything in it. Physicist and professor Russell Stannard, a confident guide through this complex and, at times, contradictory territory, proves skilled at analogies and visualizations, and sympathetic over the difficulty of the questions he raises. These are mind-shattering inquiries: thoughts about thoughts and observations about observations. The author presents this confusion as the status quo and illuminates how all the contradictions of physics still come together to define a universe. Stannard also reminds the reader that everything he describes could be obsolete tomorrow. He provides perspective for – and getAbstract recommends this book to – all those interested in science, predictions of the future, philosophy and human nature.

Take-Aways

  • Science won’t reach its limits soon, but it will stop making fundamental discoveries.
  • People’s internal experiences with their minds and thoughts differ fundamentally from objective or scientific descriptions of thinking.
  • The universe began with the Big Bang. Before that, neither space nor time existed.

About the Author

Russell Stannard is an emeritus professor of physics at the United Kingdom’s Open University.


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