| Selected Product: | The Discovery of Time (Discovery) Paperback Publisher: Sourcebooks Release Date: June 2001 ISBN-10: B000KHXC0S Average Customer Rating: | | Finding Atlantis: A True Story of Genius, Madness, and an Extraordinary Quest for a Lost World ISBN-10: 1400047536 ISBN-13: 9781400047536 List Price:$13.95 Chances Are: Adventures in Probability ISBN-10: 0143038346 ISBN-13: 9780143038344 List Price:$15.00 Sundials: History, Art, People, Science ISBN-10: 0711224943 ISBN-13: 9780711224940 List Price:$50.00 | To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Discovery of Time (Discovery) by 0 (ISBN-10: B000KHXC0S, ISBN-13: 0). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Discovery of Time (Discovery) by 0 (ISBN-10: B000KHXC0S, ISBN-13: 0). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com An accessible text telling the story of how man understands his position in the universe and how this led to astonishing speculation about the nature of time. Scientists, historians and philosophers explain the many different approaches humans have taken to approaching time throughout the world. Softcover. DLC: Time. Beautifully illustrated, well-written | Customer Rating: | | A series of essays on various aspects of time with really wonderful illustrations and a clear presentation. Strictly for the layperson and perhaps slightly younger crowd, and far more accessible than many books you'll find about time and our concept of it through the ages. Reflects the current research just enough to ground it in credibility but not so much that it eludes or bores a non-professional. I thoroughly enjoyed it and recommend it. The prices that are currently offered are remarkably low for a book constructed of such high-quality paper and binding. The original published price was $25 but I got it for $6. | What is it that we never have enough of? | Customer Rating: | Time is fascinating; universally experienced yet not entirely understood. Most books on time seem to focus on either history & calendaring systems, clocks & mechanical devices, or the societal effects of increasingly accurate time measurement. This book is far more broad in its approach and ranges from astronomical observation to a summary of research into the manner by which our brains perceive the passage of time. Each "chapter" is a self-contained article about a specific facet of the idea of time.
Readers looking for an in-depth analysis would best look elsewhere; however, the breadth of ideas explored in this book provides a broad perspective lacking in more focused works. The presentation is heavy on graphics and illustrations, rather like the old Time-Life science series that was regrettably allowed to lapse. Make no mistake though, the articles are written at a high level and demand a fair bit of attention. A second volume would be most welcome.
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