How to Love the Universe: A Scientist's Odes to the Hidden Beauty Behind the Visible World

How to Love the Universe: A Scientist's Odes to the Hidden Beauty Behind the Visible World

by Stefan Klein
How to Love the Universe: A Scientist's Odes to the Hidden Beauty Behind the Visible World

How to Love the Universe: A Scientist's Odes to the Hidden Beauty Behind the Visible World

by Stefan Klein

eBook

$11.49  $14.99 Save 23% Current price is $11.49, Original price is $14.99. You Save 23%.

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

The bestselling author of The Science of Happiness delivers a book “suffused with genuine wonder and affection for the beauty of particle physics” (Foreword Reviews).

A single rose suggests the sublime interdependence of all life. A sudden storm points to the world’s unpredictability. A marble conjures the birth of the cosmos.

How to Love the Universe shows us how everyday objects and events can reveal some of the deepest mysteries in all of science. In ten eye-opening chapters of lyrical prose, Stefan Klein contemplates time, space, dark matter, and more, encouraging us to fall in love with the universe the same way scientists do: The more we know about twenty-first-century physics, the more enchanting our world becomes. You won’t look at a rose the same way again.

“Cosmic inflation and warped space, the measurement of time, and the search for dark energy are all examined in thoughtful, accessible language that brings ideas to vivid life. Klein’s latest work encourages readers to think, consider, and give in to scientific fascination.” —Publishers Weekly

“In this finely written book, Stefan Klein brings a poetic and distinctive perspective to some fascinating fundamental questions.” —Martin Rees, Astronomer Royal

“Klein sets forth to share the poetry of the universe and succeeds, offering a grounding in the science and beauty that comprises the world around us. The text is easily attainable to casual readers and scientists alike, and will help both to understand the universe better.” —Library Journal

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781615195084
Publisher: The Experiment
Publication date: 04/30/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 242
Sales rank: 582,975
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Stefan Klein, PhD, a trained physicist, is a longtime and internationally acclaimed science writer and journalist. His many books include the #1 international bestseller The Science of Happiness and have been translated into twenty-five languages.

Table of Contents

1 The Poetry of Reality 1

A rose makes us aware that nothing and nobody stands alone.

The more we know about how things in the universe relate to each other, the more mysterious the world seems to us.

2 A Marble in the Cosmos 11

The earth rises over the moon and we see the universe as it is being born. Much greater spaces are concealed behind the visible cosmos.

Reality is quite different from how it seems to us.

3 Riding on a Ray of Light 27

A young man wonders what light is, and his reflections on light explain the world to him. Time and space are revealed. But when Albert Einstein dies, light is still a mystery.

4 The World Spirit Fails 45

A hurricane sweeps across Germany, a storm no one saw coming.

Reasons why the world is unpredictable, and praise for the creative universe.

5 A Crime Story 67

A villainous gang is raiding apartments in London and New York.

Although the burglars were not able to arrange things with each other, their raids are perfectly coordinated.

Investigator Glock is looking for a secret plan, but cannot find one. His conclusion: All the places in the world are, in reality, one place.

6 Is the World Real? 97

A hammer hits a thumb. But the hammer, like all matter, consists of emptiness.

How can nothingness hurt like that? And then-does the nothingness exist at all?

7 "Who Ordered That?" 115

We live in a shadow world. No matter where we look, there is twenty times more than appears to us. More of what? We have no idea. But without dark energy, without dark matter, we couldn't exist.

8 How Time Passes 135

A greying beard makes you wonder why the past can never come back. We experience the passing of time because we are not omniscient.

The universe is growing older, as well.

9 Beyond the Horizon 155

The night is dark because the world had a beginning.

Since then the universe has been expanding.

Space is bigger than we can imagine.

Thoughts on being amazed.

10 Why We Exist 175

In each of us one of the most astonishing characteristics of the universe appears: Intelligent life is not only possible but even probable.

How can anyone maintain, therefore, that we are meaningless?

Notes 197

Acknowledgments 223

About the Author 230

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews