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Lädt ... Measuring Eternity: The Search for the Beginning of Time (2001. Auflage)von Martin Gorst (Autor)
Werk-InformationenMeasuring Eternity: The Search for the Beginning of Time von Martin Gorst
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Well-written and highly entertaining history of progressively more successful efforts to date the earth and later efforts to do the same for the universe. Few questions have baffled and excited mathematicians, astronomers, physicists, geologists, theologians and average Joes as much as those that seek to explore the mysteries of time. Gorst, a writer and director of science documentaries, discusses how human understanding of time shifted throughout the centuries, as models of the universe became more accurate and instruments for gathering data grew more sophisticated.
The untold story of the religious figures, philosophers, astronomers, geologists, physicists, and mathematicians who, for more than four hundred years, have pursued the answer to a fundamental question at the intersection of science and religion: When did the universe begin? The moment of the universe's conception is one of science's Holy Grails, investigated by some of the most brilliant and inquisitive minds across the ages. Few were more committed than Bishop James Ussher, who lost his sight during the fifty years it took him to compose his Annals of all known history, now famous only for one date: 4004 b.c. Ussher's date for the creation of the world was spectacularly inaccurate, but that didn't stop it from being so widely accepted that it was printed in early twentieth-century Bibles. As writer and documentary filmmaker Martin Gorst vividly illustrates in this captivating, character-driven narrative, theology let Ussher down just as it had thwarted Theophilus of Antioch and many before him. Geology was next to fail the test of time. In the eighteenth century, naturalist Comte de Buffon, working out the rate at which the earth was supposed to have cooled, came up with an age of 74,832 years, even though he suspected this was far too low. Biology then had a go in the hands of fossil hunter Johann Scheuchzer, who alleged to have found a specimen of a man drowned at the time of Noah's flood. Regrettably it was only the imprint of a large salamander. And so science inched forward via Darwinism, thermodynamics, radioactivity, and, most recently, the astronomers at the controls of the Hubble space telescope, who put the beginning of time at 13.4 billion years ago (give or take a billion). Taking the reader into the laboratories and salons of scholars and scientists, visionaries and eccentrics, Measuring Eternity is an engagingly written account of an epic, often quixotic quest, of how individuals who dedicated their lives to solving an enduring mystery advanced our knowledge of the universe. Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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It covers the scientists we are all familiar with and those we have probably never heard of. It covers the exciting 'real' discoveries and the amusing 'mistakes'. It shows the great scientists, such as Newton and Einstein, making 'right' discoveries and their heartbreak when they were sometimes glaringly wrong.
The book shows the wide range of disciplines that were involved. The early naturalists - working to find answers through biology, fossils, geology and later the chemists and physicists.
The book is well written, telling you a tale of search, rather than being pages of data and formulas. It is a tale of people.
It's even fun. At the end of the 1600s, people were trying to explain how fossils were buried in so many layers of the earth, - if they had been deposited by the Flood. One explanation was that 'the water for the Flood came from an interior ocean hidden beneath the Earth's crust. In the normal state this was held in place by gravity, but at the time of the Flood, God had momentarily suspended the full force of gravity and the water had spilled out.' Later when God restored the gravity the fossils were sank by their density - therefore the heavier ones being lowest. ( )