Globe Pequot / Prometheus
Pages: 266
Trim: 5½ x 8½
978-1-61592-225-3 • Paperback • November 2014 • $19.00 • (£14.99)
978-1-61614-455-5 • eBook • November 2014 • $18.00 • (£13.99)
""An engaging crosswalk between key Pre-Socratic Greek philosophers' concepts of the natural world and current cutting-edge physics research…. This book's unusual approach to history, philosophy, and modern physics should be enjoyable to readers from high schoolers through adult.”—Library Journal“Knits together history, religion, science, and philosophy…. Readers looking for an informal introduction to the early history of science and its philosophical links to modern physics will find an accessible introduction here.” —Publishers Weekly“... a competent and accessible reconstruction of the views of noteworthy Greek philosophers and an introduction to the current frontiers of physical inquiry.... [In the Light of Science is] as much philosophical as historical and as much about the present as the past."—Physics Today“Wonderful…This book should serve as an excellent resource for teachers and college students alike and can be used as a text within a class on the history of science or as a supplement to one on modern physics…. Engaging.”—NSTA Recommends“It's a high-concept read, but approachable enough that a layperson can understand…. Above all this book inspires readers to not be content with the destination of science, but to follow their own journey of discovery and never stop questioning the nature of nature in the form of the space, matter, time, and energy all around us.”—San Francisco Book Review“For those of you who are less aware [of the topic] and who really want to get a better grounding in science, then this book is an ideal choice. Nicolaides will smoothly get you to grips across the board…”—SF Crowsnest“A fascinating book for the nonspecialized reader interested in a broad and new interpretation of the history of science, as well as one who is curious about science itself. It discusses key developments of human culture (and their connection to the later development of science), including urbanization, the birth of civilization, and the evolution of religions, in a unique way. And via the birth of science, 2,600 years ago, it contemplates the mind-bending science of modern times. All in all, a must-read book!” —Klimis Ntalianis, PhD, assistant professor of engineering, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, Greece“The author explores the human desire to understand the most fundamental of questions about the universe by narrating a succinct history of our species since its evolution 200,000 years ago and by taking an exciting new approach in the comparison of ancient Greek philosophy with the theories of modern physics.”—Ivana Djuric, PhD, professor of physics, Passaic County Community College“The thing I find most interesting is the discussions of how modern physics builds on and thus coincides in many ways with the philosophic speculations of the ancient Greeks.” —Dennis Organ, Ph.D., Emeritus Professor of English, and Dean of the College of Arts and Humanities, Harding University “
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