Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Between Inner Space and Outer Space : Essays on Science, Art, and Philosophy - John D. Barrow

Between Inner Space and Outer Space

Essays on Science, Art, and Philosophy

By: John D. Barrow

Paperback | 15 March 2000

At a Glance

Paperback


$42.85

or 4 interest-free payments of $10.71 with

 or 

Ships in 5 to 7 business days

The origins of life on earth, the workings of the human mind, the mysteries of the Universe itself--profound questions such as these were once the province of philosophy and theology alone. Today they have become the staple--and indeed the hallmark--of the finest writing about science. And few science writers have tackled the big questions as persistently and as insightfully as astronomer John Barrow.
Now, in Between Inner Space and Outer Space, Barrow brings together dozens of essays that offer a sweeping account of his explorations along the boundary lines of science, philosophy, and religion. Here is an invigorating tour of topics such as cosmology, evolution, Grand Unified Theories, complexity and chaos, the nature of time, super string theory, quantum mechanics, particle physics, Big Bang theory, and much more. Barrow's range is remarkable. He examines, for instance, what science can tell us about our love of music or why certain paintings appeal to us. He recounts the dramatic discoveries made by the satellite COBE (Cosmic Background Explorer) and reveals what these findings tell us about the origins of the Cosmos. He discusses the debate over the nature of the universe waged by Stephen Hawking and Roger Penrose. And he offers a thoughtful review of E.O. Wilson's Consilience, seconding Wilson's criticism of social scientists who remain quite ignorant of the key insights made by the life sciences.
Leavened with a sprightly sense of humor, Between Inner Space and Outer Space illuminates modern science as it provides much food for thought about life's ultimate questions.
Industry Reviews
..it is consistently diverting and illuminating and indeed, at its best, hard to put down in its communication of the excitement of seeing the world as an exercise in the mathematics of energy. Hugh Lawson-Tancred, The Spectator

More in Popular Science

Liars, cheats and copycats : Trickery and deception in nature - James O'Hanlon
Seven Brief Lessons on Physics : Anniversary Edition - Carlo Rovelli
A Short History of Nearly Everything 2.0 - Bill Bryson

RRP $36.99

$29.75

20%
OFF
Speed : How it Explains the World - Vaclav Smil

RRP $36.99

$29.75

20%
OFF
The Holographic Universe - Michael Talbot
How Emotions Are Made : The Secret Life of the Brain - Lisa Feldman Barrett
The First Astronomers : How Indigenous Elders read the stars - Duane Hamacher
Dingo : The true story of Australia's most maligned native animal - Roland Breckwoldt
Ferment : The Life-Changing Power of Microbes - Tim Spector

RRP $36.99

$29.75

20%
OFF
Ernest Rutherford and the Birth of Modern Physics - Matthew Wright