Just Six Numbers by Martin J. Rees, , 0297842978 Search discount cheap book, Compare Book prices, Find Lowest Price
 Compare book prices at 85 bookstores
Add to Favorite Tell a Friend Link to Us Contact Us Help Home Wish List New!
us online discount book stores United States | canada online books for less Canada | Rare/Out-of-print Books

Just Six Numbers, cheap new, used books  Just Six Numbers: The Deep Forces That Shape the Universe (Science Masters)
Author: Martin J Rees  
ISBN: 0297842978   /   Hardcover
Publisher: Weidenfeld & Nicolson   /   1999-10-14
List Price: £12.99
Similar Books   More Details from Amazon.co.uk
Compare new, used book prices

Editorial Reviews:
Just six numbers govern the shape, size and texture of our universe. If their values were only fractionally different, we would not exist nor, in many cases, would matter have had a chance to form. If the numbers that govern our universe were elegant--1, say, or Pi or the Golden Mean--we would simply shrug and say that the universe was an elegant mathematical puzzle. But the numbers Martin Rees discusses are far from tidy. Was the universe "tweaked" or is it one of many universes, all run by slightly different, but equally messy, rules?

This is familiar ground, though rarely so comprehensively explored. What makes Rees's book exceptional is his conviction that cosmology is as materialistic and as conceptually simple as any of the earth sciences. Indeed, "cosmology is simpler in one important respect: once the starting point is specified, the outcome is in broad terms predictable. All large patches of the universe that start off the same way end up statistically similar. In contrast, if the Earth's history were re-run, it could end up with a quite different biosphere."

Rees demonstrates how the cosmos is full of "fossils" from which we can deduce how our universe developed, as surely as we infer the earth's past from the relics found in sedimentary rocks. Rees's theme is nothing less than the colossal richness of the universe. It is an ambitious book, if anything, it deserves to be longer. --Simon Ings


Customer Reviews:
Excellent Speculations About the Implications of Cosmology     
Popular science books are often so simplified that little is gained by reading them. Add equations, and some people will ignore the book. Become detailed in mathematics, and more people will be lost. Professor Rees has done a remarkable service in this outstanding book by taking mathematical ratios and exploring their implications in nonmathematical ways. The result builds a totally new metaphor for considering the structure of the universe . . . that of a stable system.

He then takes that metaphor and uses it to build an understanding of the important unanswered questions about cosmology and how answers may be derived through a combination of experimenation, observation, and systems analysis. As a result, the nonscientist is brought into the "thinking" part of these scientific areas without needing to have much scientific background.

I was attracted to the book by the concept of how six numbers could explain a great deal about the universe. The development of that theme turned out to be a pleasant surprise.

The six numbers are:

nu (a ratio of the strength of electrical forces that hold atoms together compared to the force of gravity which is 10 to the 37th power)

epsilon (how firmly the atomic nuclei bind together which is 0.004)

omega (amount of material in the universe)

lambda (force of cosmic "antigravity" discovered in 1998, which is a very small number)

Q (ratio of two fundamental energies, which is 1/100,000)

delta (number of spatial dimensions in our universe)

Doesn't look overwhelming, does it? Well, that highlights the book's strength, which is to explain the importance of these numbers. Basically, Professor Rees describes the background behind how the numbers were developed, then explores the implications of the number (especially by looking at what happens if the number was much larger or smaller), and then ties the number to implications for other cosmological questions and puzzles. Building from one to the next, he describes the current state of cosmological thinking through an architecture of these six numbers. To this summary of the known science, he adds his own conjectures by way of potential hypotheses for future testing.

We are at an interesting time for cosmological study. Because our ability to peer into space is improving rapidly due to advances in space and earth telescopes, more kinds of observations can be conducted to test basic theories about the nature of the forces in the universe. We should expect rapid progress in knowledge, as a result. Stephen Hawking has placed a twenty dollar bet that the elusive "unified field theory" that frustrated Einstein will appear within twenty years (but you should also know that he just paid off a loss on the same bet). A pathway that follows along understanding superstrings of 10 dimensional matter seems promising in this regard for now.

I found the writing to be very appealing in this book. Professor Rees is gifted in using examples to make the incomprehensible more meaningful. He is also ruthless in excising any detail that you do not need to know to comprehend the points he is developing. So you get a lean, compact argument. He writes clearly, which simplifies the reader's task while increasing the reader's pleasure. The text is benefited by several interesting illustrations, as well.

After you have finished reading this informative and stimulating book, ask yourself what the implications of a stable system are. Does it mean that some greater hand has been involved? Does it have no further implications, whatsoever? Does it mean that even greater systems should be assumed? How does it square with the notion of entropy (order becoming disordered)? If you are like me, new questions and perspectives will occur to you after reading this book that will greatly increase your interest in and appreciation of cosmology and physics.

Look backward and outward to see the future more clearly, and then ask, "What is the essence?"

Expansive Insight     
"There are three great frontiers in science: the very big, the very small and the very complex. Cosmology involves them all." - Sir Martin Rees.

It takes sound grasp, knowledge and intellect to explain with clarity and simplicity. Sir Martin Rees achieves this here. He provides a useful, absorbing and accessible contribution to lay understanding of cosmology, astrophysics, mathematical astrophysics and so on.

In explaining why a 'Big Bang' (or 'Expansion') might account for our universe, Martin Rees pins his exposition around six key properties: 2 relating to basic forces, 2 to scale and structure, and 2 describing space.

By the end of this book you will understand more about cosmology and how it relates to chemistry, Newton's laws, the general theory of relativity, quantum mechanics, superstring & membrane theory, the search for a Grand Unification Theory, and so on.

Sir Martin also admits what remains to be discovered and how this might refine or deflate the 'Big Bang'. He also explores alternate theories and challenges (but unfortunately does not here address 'Plasma Cosmology'). Mercifully he does not embrace or expound any facile drivel of the 'Goddidit' variety.

If you wish to broaden or deepen your comprehension of cosmology, you will develop fascinating insights and a more encompassing horizon on the subject here.

less than gripping     
I've read several of titles on cosmology which are popular at the moment, and I liked this one the least of all. Whereas "The Elegant Universe" kept me facinated mostly throughout, I found myself loosing interest and saying "So what" all to much in this book. "Read this one if you don't have anything else to read," I'd say.
Fascinating cosmology for first-time enthusiasts     
What an eye opener! Martin Rees has an amazing gift of being able to explain mathematics and physics in an imaginative and readable way which kept me, as a mathematical novice, completely hooked from start to finish. He explains how intelligent life has evolved from a particular mix of six numbers interconnected with each other, and how if any one of the numbers had been even slightly different, life would never have existed. He uses metaphors and picture language to illustrate his points. Every time I had a question, he answered it within the next few pages, and I felt he must have known what I was unsure of. It saved me a lot of correspondence with him! My only slight disappointment was in the last paragraph of the whole book, which was not nearly as upbeat as Stephen Hawking's last paragraph in the conclusion of his "A Brief History of Time". But I shall probably write to Martin Rees anyway and tell him just how wonderful I think his book is!
View more reviews or product details from Amazon.co.uk


 

            

 

Looking for Rare, Out of Print Books? Click here


About Us
 Recommend Us Bookmark Link To Us Wish List New!


us online discount book stores United States | buy uk books online United Kingdom | canada online books for less Canada

(c) 2004 BookFinder4u UK - Search Cheap new, used, out of print books.


Suggestion Box:
Let us know anything you like or don't like about this website.