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Time surrounds us. It defines our experience of the world; it echoes through our every waking hour. Time is the very foundation of conscious experience. Yet as familiar as it is, time is also deeply mysterious. We cannot see, hear, smell, taste, or touch it. Yet we do feel it—or at least we think we feel it. No wonder poets, writers, philosophers, and scientists have grappled with time for centuries.
In his latest book, award-winning science writer Dan Falk chronicles the story of how humans have come to understand time over the millennia, and by drawing from the latest research in physics, psychology, and other fields, Falk shows how that understanding continues to evolve. In Search of Time begins with our earliest ancestors’ perception of time and the discoveries that led—with much effort—to the Gregorian calendar, atomic clocks, and “leap seconds.” Falk examines the workings of memory, the brain’s remarkable “bridge across time,” and asks whether humans are unique in their ability to recall the past and imagine the future. He explores the possibility of time travel, and the paradoxes it seems to entail. Falk looks at the quest to comprehend the beginning of time and how time—and the universe—may end. Finally, he examines the puzzle of time’s “flow,” and the remarkable possibility that the passage of time may be an illusion.
Entertaining, illuminating, and ultimately thought provoking, In Search of Time reveals what some of our most insightful thinkers have had to say about time, from Aristotle to Kant, from Newton to Einstein, and continuing with the brightest minds of today.
An accessible entry into the world of TimeReviewed by vr, 2010-02-04
This is an excellent book for regular people that have some
interest in the subject of Time. The author covers several aspects
involving Time, from historical evidence of when civilizations
first started understanding and taking advantage of time, to the
philosophical Time, to the latest scientific concepts and theories
around Time.
The book is excellently written. The first part of the book takes
us through the evolution of time in history and in different
cultures/civilizations and is written in such a way that the reader
is always excited to find out what the next page will tell us about
Time. The second part of the book, more focused in the scientific
aspect of Time, explains how Time has been dealt with in the major
breakthroughs of science, from Newton to Einsten and Hawking.
Having tried to read other science books and gotten lost along the
technical concepts, the author did a very good job in shielding the
reader from the deepness of such concepts and theories and
explained them in a very accessible manner.
What is time?Reviewed by M. Shepherd, 2010-01-30
What is time? That is the central question of this book. The author
goes after this question from several different angles.
Historical and modern, scientific and philosophical. Actually the
book goes after a number of closely related questions. Not
only
What is time, but how does it work, why do we preceive it the way
we do, does it exist in reality or is it an invention of the
human mind, ect. If you are looking for definitive anwsers, as you
probably expect, there are none as yet. But this book will
give you insights and much food for thought on these
subjects.
The book is well written, interesting, and easy to
understand.
Not at All What I Was Hoping ForReviewed by E. David Swan, 2009-12-03
Way back in 1995 I read a fascinating book by Paul Davies called
`About Time'. What makes the topic of time so interesting is that
most people believe that they intuitively understand time and yet
our perception and reality can be at odds. Unlike most things in
nature science cannot stand outside of time and study it. We also
have a very limited understanding of time based on that fact that
we have no personal experiences with the very fast, the very
distant and the very massive. This is why from our perspective
Newtonian physics, which fundamentally misinterprets time, works
perfectly fine in everyday life. My expectation for the book was to
read more about the science of time possibly updated with research
done within the past decade and a half. I don't think my
expectation was unreasonable given the subtitle of the book, `The
SCIENCE of a curious DIMENSION'. Note the prominence of the word
`science'. To say I was disappointed would be a great
understatement.
The first half of the book is about the history of timekeeping
going back thousands of years. It's mildly interesting but
certainly not why I purchased the book. About halfway through we
finally get to Einstein's Theory of Relativity and the book briefly
became intriguing although it never expands on ideas I've already
read in many other books. In fact the second half of the book was
sort of a primer on modern physics in general with the author
touching on the big bang, black holes, dark matter, the smoothness
of background radiation, grand unified theory, string theory
(including m-branes), paradoxes of time travel and so on and so
forth. What he doesn't do is ever delve into any one topic long
enough to do anything more than scratch the surface. Quite frankly
this book could have been written by a layman like me and why would
I want to read a book I could have written. You can argue that the
aforementioned topics are all related to time but you can also
argue that paint drying is related to time but I don't want to read
a book about drying paint.
In the end this book appears to be little more than a beginner's
physics book along with some history of keeping time. For me it
ended up being a waste of time (how ironic) and quite frankly was a
chore to get through. Paul Davies' book delved far far deeper into
the physics of time and was much more fascinating and better
written. The author even refers back to Paul Davies book several
times and inspired me to reread it. After just a few pages I could
immediately recognize it as a far superior book. `In Search of
Time' might be interesting to someone who hasn't spent much or any
time reading popular science books but if you really want to get
into the subject go with Davies.
A Must ReadReviewed by Lensam, 2009-06-03
The book is excellent specially if you dont have a technical background (e.i Physics etc). Took me just a week to read it, the reading is easy yet extremely interesting. I was gonna buy it to re-sell it later on but im keeping this one for my personal library. A must have...I dont say that about a lot books...:)
Timeless...Reviewed by Steve Reina, 2009-03-09
Part everything you ever wanted to know, part up to the minute (no
pun intended) survey of the latest science, this book is one of
those easy to read, accessible 200 or so page scientific tomes that
so seem to dominate science bookshelves.
But it's also a wonderful one volume treatment of its intended
topic, right up there with About Time by Paul Davies and Hyperspace
by Michio Kaku.
In brief this book treats the various arrows of time from the one
we psychologically perceive right down to the one at the subatomic
level.
Though Falk's treatment of the history of time and how we got the
sixty minute hour is fascinating (thank the Babylonians he says), I
think this book is at best discussing the cutting edge
science.
And in terms of the cutting edge science it all boils down to one
question: Is Julius Caesar still alive?
Though the gut answer is that Caesar is long dead such a view runs
contrary to modern science which says that mathematics provides no
justification for saying that any one time in time is more
preferred than another.
In this way, Caesar's apparent death is merely "a stubbornly
persistent illusion" as Einstein would put it. And as Newton puts
it (who still remains a special case of Einstein) gravity reduces
its grip as part of a straight forward inverse square
calculation.
The big deal: If we were really living in a four dimensional world,
gravity would reduces its grip as part of an inverse cube
calculation...a mathematical proof the passage of time that seems
so obvious to us is merely a human generated illusion.
In this way, our perception of the passage of time is like the
deliciousness of steak or the pleasant smell of flowers...a user
illusion put their (albeit for good evolutionary reasons) by our
consciousness.
Whether you agree with all this or not (I personally think both
Caesar and Elvis are dead) it still remains fascinating reading and
an interesting take on a topic we all too easily can take for
granted.
For those time fans who've read this book as well the previous Kaku
and Davies entries, I would also suggest The End of Time by Julian
Barbour, the Time Machine by H.G. Wells both mentioned by this
author and for the ambitious the Fifth Edition of the Physical
Basis for the Direction of Time by Dieter Zee.