The Day Without Yesterday: Lemaitre, Einstein, and the Birth of Modern Cosmology
Autor John Farrellen Limba Engleză Paperback – 5 oct 2006
Sometimes
our
understanding
of
our
universe
is
given
a
huge
boost
by
one
insightful
thinker.
Such
a
boost
came
in
the
first
half
of
the
twentieth
century,
when
an
obscure
Belgian
priest
put
his
mind
to
deciphering
the
nature
of
the
cosmos.
Is
the
universe
evolving
to
some
unforeseen
end,
or
is
it
static,
as
the
Greeks
believed?
The
debate
has
preoccupied
thinkers
from
Heraclitus
to
the
author
of
the
Upanishads,
from
the
Mayans
to
Einstein.
The
Day
Without
Yesterday
covers
the
modern
history
of
an
evolving
universe,
and
how
Georges
Lemaitre
convinced
a
generation
of
thinkers
to
embrace
the
notion
of
cosmic
expansion
and
the
theory
that
this
expansion
could
be
traced
backward
to
the
cosmic
origins,
a
starting
point
for
space
and
time
that
Lemaitre
called
"the
day
without
yesterday."
Lemaitre's
skill
with
mathematics
and
the
equations
of
relativity
enabled
him
to
think
much
more
broadly
about
cosmology
than
anyone
else
at
the
time,
including
Einstein.
Lemaitre
proposed
the
expanding
model
of
the
universe
to
Einstein,
who
rejected
it.
Had
Einstein
followed
Lemaitre's
thinking,
he
could
have
predicted
the
expansion
of
the
universe
more
than
a
decade
before
it
was
actually
discovered.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781560259022
ISBN-10: 1560259027
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 216 x 216 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.29 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: BASIC BOOKS
Colecția Basic Books
ISBN-10: 1560259027
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 216 x 216 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.29 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: BASIC BOOKS
Colecția Basic Books
Notă biografică
John
Farrellis
a
Boston-based
writer
and
producer
educated
at
Harvard
in
English
Literature
and
History
of
Science.
The
former
director
of
media
at
the
Carl
J.
Shapiro
Institute
for
Education
and
Research,
Beth
Israel
Deaconess
Medical
Center,
Harvard
Medical
School,
Farrell
has
written
for
print
and
online
journals
such
as
Salon,
National
Review,
First
Things
and
Tech
Central.
He
has
published
short
fiction
and
poetry
and
produced
a
number
of
independent
videos
for
education
and
entertainment.
He
lives
north
of
Boston.