Total Number of Books in Collection Library : 127

 

Page number: 40
 

Hidden Unity in Nature's Laws

Author: John C. Taylor
ISBN: 0521659388
Publisher: Cambridge University Press         Place:
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Format: Paperback         # Pages: 504
Reader Rating: 3.5 (3 votes)
Release: 2001
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Summary: One of the paradoxes of the physical sciences is that as our knowledge has progressed, more and more diverse physical phenomena can be explained in terms of fewer underlying laws, or principles. In Hidden Unity, eminent physicist John Taylor puts many of these findings into historical perspective and documents how progress is made when unexpected, hidden unities are uncovered between apparently unrelated physical phenomena. Taylor cites examples from the ancient Greeks to the present day, such as the unity of celestial and terrestrial dynamics (17th century), the unity of heat within the rest of dynamics (18th century), the unity of electricity, magnetism, and light (19th century), the unity of space and time and the unification of nuclear forces with electromagnetism (20th century). Without relying on mathematical detail, Taylor's emphasis is on fundamental physics, like particle physics and cosmology. Balancing what is understood with the unestablished theories and still unanswered questions, Taylor takes readers on a fascinating ongoing journey. John C. Taylor is Professor Emeritus of Mathematical Physics at the University of Cambridge. A student of Nobel laureate Abdus Salam, Taylor's research career has spanned the era of developments in elementary particle physics since the 1950s. He taught theoretical physics at Imperial College, London, and at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and he has lectured worldwide. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society and a Fellow of the Institute of Physics.


 

How the Laws of Physics Lie

Author: Nancy Cartwright
ISBN: 0198247044
Publisher: Oxford University Press         Place:
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Format: Paperback         # Pages: 232
Reader Rating: 2.5 (2 votes)
Release: 1983
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Summary: In this sequence of philosophical essays about natural science, the author argues that fundamental explanatory laws, the deepest and most admired successes of modern physics, do not in fact describe regularities that exist in nature. Cartwright draws from many real-life examples to propound a novel distinction: that theoretical entities, and the complex and localized laws that describe them, can be interpreted realistically, but the simple unifying laws of basic theory cannot.


 

Journey into Gravity and Spacetime

Author: John Archibald Wheeler
ISBN: 0716750163
Publisher: Scientific American Library         Place:
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Format: Hardcover         # Pages: 257
Reader Rating: 5.0 (4 votes)
Release: 1990
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Summary: Driven by the belief that gravity makes the closest connection between the world we see around us and the inner-most workings of the universe, distinguished physicist John Archibald Wheeler applies Einstein's battle-tested theory to both familiar and exotic pheonomena. Gravity, he shows, is not a force acting at a distance; it is mass gripping spacetime, telling it how to curve, and spacetime gripping mass, telling it how to move. Chronicling first the ideas and contributions of Newton, Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz, Karl Friedrich Gauss, Bernhard Riemann, and Ernst Mach, Wheeler then turns to the insights of Einstein's followers.
In describing the workings of gravity, Wheeler draws on everything from flying tennis balls, to hurling gravity waves from crashing stars, the motion of the planets, and the collapse of a star into a black hole. An imaginative account by a physicist who has participated in most of the important work in physics of the last 50 years, "A Journey into Gravity and Spacetime" is an important addition to personal and academic collections.


 

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