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Powell's Staff:
Five Book Friday: In Memoriam
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Every year, the booksellers at Powell’s submit their Top Fives: their five favorite books that were released in 2023. It’s a list that, when put together, shows just how varied and interesting the book tastes of Powell’s booksellers are. I highly recommend digging into the recommendations — we would never lead you astray — but today...
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Brontez Purnell:
Powell’s Q&A: Brontez Purnell, author of ‘Ten Bridges I’ve Burnt’
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Rachael P.:
Starter Pack: Where to Begin with Ursula K. Le Guin
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Customer Comments
elizabeth.farquhar has commented on (3) products
Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind
by
Julian Jaynes
elizabeth.farquhar
, September 01, 2011
A fascinating book on the meaning of awareness and cognition, using examples from modern-day studies done on people with schizophrenia or epilepsy to illustrate the theory that not so very long ago, our left hands TRULY did not know what our right hands were doing - or rather, our left brains and right brains were connected in a different way, causing people to see visions of gods and angels and build civilizations and religions around them. If you're looking for a book that will get you thinking about the act of thinking itself, I recommend this one.
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Windup Girl
by
Paolo Bacigalupi
elizabeth.farquhar
, January 03, 2011
Global warming and genetic modifications have created a world ruled by corporations and military dictatorships, in a story of faith, deception, and the nature of humanity.
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Trouble with Physics The Rise of String Theory the Fall of a Science & What Comes Next
by
Lee Smolin
elizabeth.farquhar
, January 23, 2008
Also known as "OW! My brain!" I don't remember where I saw this title, but it sounded interesting, so I reserved it at the library, picked it up, sat down in a comfy chair at home, opened it up, and said "huh?" It has been a long while since I paid much attention to physics - I was really into string theory for a while, inasmuch as "really into" means "reading magazine articles and watching NOVA specials about." Anyway, I thought I had a decent enough grasp on quantum theory and string theory to deal with this book. That theory was quickly disproven. Actually, I was doing pretty well through the first few chapters, which are a summary of discoveries from Galileo (and before) through Einstein - light as particle and wave, magnetic fields, acceleration = gravity, relativity. Then the discussion moved into the search for a unified-field theory, and quantum theory, and the attempt to unite relativity and quantum theory and gravity, and I started having to deliberately slow down my normally fast/skimming reading pace, even re-reading paragraphs and whole pages several times. Symmetry, gauge forces, Higgs bosons, quantum chromodynamics, and many uses of the phrase "I won't go into detail here, but ..." Here's a quote: "Here's a simplified version of what the Stanford group did. They started with a much-studied kind of string theory - a flat four-dimensional spacetime with a small six-dimensional geometry over each point ... Then they wrapped large numbers of electric and magnetic fluxes around the six-dimensional spaces over each point." Simplified? I cannot even beging to warp my mind around ten dimensions, much less imagine wrapping fluxes (whatever they are) around them. At this point I just decided to plow through the book, understanding what I could and hoping that something I could comprehend would be at the finish. That went on for approximately three weeks and ten chapters, basically all the discussion about string theory and other completely imaginary (i.e. nontestable in the real world for the most part) creations of mathematicians and physicists who are trying to explain all that is currently unexplainable about the world - universe speeding up, lack of photon decay, dark matter, black holes and horizons, etc. - and relate it back to what is generally understood to be true, like the fact that gravity works and 1+1=2. What I did learn is that string theory is presented as a viable, working theory, when it's actually only held up by a mutual agreement by string theorists that they're right. Even though they can't prove it, and every new discovery pokes more holes in it. Smolin spent a decade or more in string theory before deciding it had more myth than matter, and that the prevalence of ST in modern science underlines a major problem: that we are training and promoting hard science mavens, with lots of technique and complicated equations, rather than philosophers like Einstein who contemplate the nature of reality and try to figure out what it is they don't know, rather than trying to make what they don't know fit what they think they know. He decries the peer review process and says that making PhD candidates, prospective professors, and grant seekers have to prove that they will bring in money for the institution with their studies, or bring in prestige, or both, means that the easiest way to get tenure and funding is to study the theory that's in vogue, which is now and has been for thirty years string theory. Smolin describes some few iconoclasts out there, proposing things like "there is no space" or "space and time are nothing but a system of relationships" and "Einstein was wrong about relativity." He briefly mentions quantum computers but I have no idea what those are. To solve these problems - both the issues around trying to reconcile quantum theory with relativity/gravity, and the issues relating to how hard it is to get funding to study something completely new and out there - he suggests that "young scientists should be hired and promoted based only on their ability, creativity, and independence, without regard to whether they contribute to string theory or any other established research program ... People should be penalized for doing superficial work that ignores hard problems and rewarded for attacking the long-standing open conjectures, even if progress takes many years." My progress in even beginning to get the merest hint of comprehension about all of this will take many years. And I probably won't be too serious about it. But I'm interested enough, again, to look for more information on what's happening in the world of math and physics. Maybe I can borrow a "Discover Kids" magazine from my niece. Conclusion: Recommended. Take two aspirin and call me in the morning to talk about the book. We're all cosmologic accidents anyway.
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