Calculating the Cosmos
How Mathematics Unveils the Universe
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Narrated by:
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Dana Hickox
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By:
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Ian Stewart
About this listen
In Calculating the Cosmos, Ian Stewart presents an exhilarating guide to the cosmos, from our solar system to the entire universe. He describes the architecture of space and time, dark matter and dark energy, how galaxies form, why stars implode, how everything began, and how it's all going to end. He considers parallel universes, the fine-tuning of the cosmos for life, what forms extraterrestrial life might take, and the likelihood of life on Earth being snuffed out by an asteroid.
Beginning with the Babylonian integration of mathematics into the study of astronomy and cosmology, Stewart traces the evolution of our understanding of the cosmos: How Kepler's laws of planetary motion led Newton to formulate his theory of gravity. How, two centuries later, tiny irregularities in the motion of Mars inspired Einstein to devise his general theory of relativity. How, 80 years ago, the discovery that the universe is expanding led to the development of the Big Bang theory of its origins. How single-point origin and expansion led cosmologists to theorize new components of the universe, such as inflation, dark matter, and dark energy. But does inflation explain the structure of today's universe? Does dark matter actually exist? Could a scientific revolution that will challenge the long-held scientific orthodoxy and once again transform our understanding of the universe be on the way? In an exciting and engaging style, Calculating the Cosmos is a mathematical quest through the intricate realms of astronomy and cosmology.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.
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Max Tegmark leads us on an astonishing journey through past, present and future, and through the physics, astronomy, and mathematics that are the foundation of his work, most particularly his hypothesis that our physical reality is a mathematical structure and his theory of the ultimate multiverse. In a dazzling combination of both popular and groundbreaking science, he not only helps us grasp his often mind-boggling theories, but he also shares with us some of the often surprising triumphs and disappointments that have shaped his life as a scientist.
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Wow!
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By: Max Tegmark
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Paradox
- The Nine Greatest Enigmas in Physics
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- Length: 6 hrs and 54 mins
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Throughout history, scientists have come up with theories and ideas that just don't seem to make sense. These we call paradoxes. The paradoxes Al-Khalili offers are drawn chiefly from physics and astronomy and represent those that have stumped some of the finest minds. With elegant explanations that bring the listener inside the mind of those who've developed them, Al-Khalili helps us to see that, in fact, paradoxes can be solved if seen from the right angle.
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Almost Useless
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By: Jim Al-Khalili
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The Island of Knowledge
- The Limits of Science and the Search for Meaning
- By: Marcelo Gleiser
- Narrated by: William Neenan
- Length: 10 hrs and 33 mins
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How much can we know about the world? In this audiobook physicist Marcelo Gleiser traces our search for answers to the most fundamental questions of existence, the origin of the universe, the nature of reality, and the limits of knowledge. In so doing he reaches a provocative conclusion: Science, like religion, is fundamentally limited as a tool for understanding the world. As science and its philosophical interpretations advance, we face the unsettling recognition of how much we don't know.
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Island of knowledge
- By Joshua Kring on 07-26-15
By: Marcelo Gleiser
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Origins
- The Scientific Story of Creation
- By: Jim Baggott
- Narrated by: Neil Scott-Barbour
- Length: 16 hrs and 47 mins
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What is the nature of the material world? How does it work? What is the universe and how was it formed? What is life? Where do we come from and how did we evolve? How and why do we think? What does it mean to be human? How do we know? There are many different versions of our creation story. This book tells the version according to modern science. It is a unique account, starting at the Big Bang and travelling right up to the emergence of humans as conscious intelligent beings, 13.8 billion years later.
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Interesting book, but WOW, the narrator ...
- By UH on 01-10-17
By: Jim Baggott
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Exoplanets
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Since its 2009 launch, the Kepler satellite has discovered more than 2,000 exoplanets, or planets outside our solar system. More exoplanets are being discovered all the time, remarkable in their variety. Astronomer Michael Summers and physicist James Trefil explore these remarkable recent discoveries: planets revolving around pulsars, planets made of diamond, planets that are mostly water, and numerous rogue planets wandering through the emptiness of space.
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FINALLY, an Attention-Grabbing Planet Book!
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Knocking on Heaven's Door
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- Narrated by: Carrington MacDuffie
- Length: 14 hrs and 24 mins
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The latest developments in physics have the potential to radically revise our understanding of the world: its makeup, its evolution, and the fundamental forces that drive its operation. Knocking on Heaven's Door is an exhilarating and accessible overview of these developments and an impassioned argument for the significance of science. There could be no better guide than Lisa Randall.
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Too Political
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The World According to Physics
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Shining a light on the most profound insights revealed by modern physics, Jim Al-Khalili invites us all to understand what this crucially important science tells us about the universe and the nature of reality itself. Al-Khalili begins by introducing the fundamental concepts of space, time, energy, and matter, and then describes the three pillars of modern physics - quantum theory, relativity, and thermodynamics - showing how all three must come together if we are ever to have a full understanding of reality.
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excellent book
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By: Jim Al-Khalili
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The Amazing Story of Quantum Mechanics
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In The Amazing Story of Quantum Mechanics, James Kakalios uses examples from comics and magazines to explain how breakthroughs in quantum mechanics led to such technologies as the World Wide Web, pocket-sized computers, mobile phones, and MRI machines.....
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The exhibits are missing from Audible
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To Explain the World
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In this rich, irreverent, and compelling history, Nobel Prize-winning physicist Steven Weinberg takes us across centuries, from ancient Miletus to medieval Baghdad and Oxford, from Plato's Academy and the Museum of Alexandria to the cathedral school of Chartres and the Royal Society of London. He shows that the scientists of ancient and medieval times not only did not understand what we understand about the world--they did not understand what there is to understand or how to understand it.
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How the world created a Newton
- By Gary on 03-02-15
By: Steven Weinberg
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Genesis
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A breakout best seller in Italy, now available for American listeners for the first time, Genesis: The Story of How Everything Began is a short, humanistic tour of the origins of the universe, earth, and life - drawing on the latest discoveries in physics to explain the seven most significant moments in the creation of the cosmos.
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This is soooo boring to listen to
- By A. Galer on 02-27-23
By: Guido Tonelli, and others
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How to Speak Science
- Gravity, Relativity, and Other Ideas That Were Crazy Until Proven Brilliant
- By: Bruce Benamran, Stephanie Delozier Strobel
- Narrated by: Braden Wright
- Length: 13 hrs and 11 mins
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As smartphones, supercomputers, supercolliders, and AI propel us into an ever more unfamiliar future, How to Speak Science takes us on a rollicking historical tour of the greatest discoveries and ideas that make today's cutting-edge technologies possible. Wanting everyone to be able to "speak" science, YouTube science guru Bruce Benamran explains - as accessibly and wittily as in his acclaimed videos - the fundamental ideas of the physical world: matter, life, the solar system, light, electromagnetism, thermodynamics, special and general relativity, and much more.
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Wowzers!
- By Ralph Temblador on 02-15-21
By: Bruce Benamran, and others
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The Big Bang of Numbers
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Our universe has multiple origin stories, from religious creation myths to the Big Bang of scientists. But if we leave those behind and start from nothing—no matter, no cosmos, not even empty space—could we create a universe using only math? Irreverent and boundlessly creative, The Big Bang of Numbers invites us to try.
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What listeners say about Calculating the Cosmos
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Sagging Booty III
- 12-18-16
The Narrator's Dilemma
Very well written book. Where others merely skim the surface, this one provides the details, necessary equations and delves into the discussions. That said, listening is ruined by the narrator's random guesswork (redundant, eh?) at pronouncing certain names, terms, and even common everyday language. Very annoying, distracting and, at times, misleading. Otherwise, his voice and pacing would have made him an effective choice.
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11 people found this helpful
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- Steve
- 12-15-22
Excellent overview of the cosmos
The author does a great job of describing the cosmos (from the details of the formation of our solar system to the entire universe, and even some cover of multi-verses). The best part of the book comes in the later chapters where the author talks about the shortcomings in current theories such as inflation, dark energy, dark matter and the big bang.
The narrator did a good job in general but was a bit annoying in that he mispronounced at lot of words such as Riemann, Laplace, topology, hyperbolic, ...Apparently, the narrator is skilled at reading text of which he has little understanding. In any event, this was only a small irritation.
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- Pinot
- 07-15-18
Book was good. Performance was distracting.
Hickox voice is good, but he needs a trainer to listen to his pronunciations and coach him.
Interesting and distracting pronunciations – Computing the Cosmos
Pierre-Simon Laplace = pronounces it as le “place” (long a)
Hans Albrecht Bethe = pronounces it beeth like teeth
John von Neuman = pronounces it von Newman
Bernard Riemann = pronounces it Rye-mun like pie-mun
Henrietta Leavitt = pronounces it leave-it
Yakov Zel’dovich = pronounces it zel-DO'-vitch – long “o” – may be OK? Just always heard it more like ZEL-du-vitch
Alan Guth = pronounces it Guth with the “u as in gus. should be gooth as in tooth
Radii = he pronounced raid-eye (multiple times)
Barred (as in a barred spiral galaxy) = he pronounced bared as in bare naked. Said several times then figured it out when the text mentioned the “bar” in a galactic arm
Axis –he pronounced as “access” throughout the entire book
Parabolic = he pronounced it par-a-BOW'-lik (might be OK, I just never heard it this way in math classes.)
Spectroscopy = pronounces it spectra-SCOPE'-y
Copernican = pronounces it cop(e)-er-KNEE'-can (long “o”, wrong syllable emphasized)
Argon = pronounces it ar-gun
Meson = pronounces it may-sun
Higg’s Boson = pronounces it boss-un
Let’s see we have proton, neutron, electron, photon then we have mesun and argun?
Analagous = pronounces it analojous – soft g
Causal = Misread it as "casual" throughout the entire book which does not quite convey the same meaning in physics
Precession (as the precession of the perihelion of Mercury = he read it as “precision”. Also does somewhat alter the meaning!
Condensate = he pronounced it con-DENSE'-ate
Magellanic = he pronounced it ma-GELL'-u-nik
Topology = he pronounced it tope-ology (long “o”) (not bad, I just never hear it this way)
Dodecahedron = he pronounced it dode-ka-HAY'-drun (long “o”)– missed the doe-decca part all together
Icosohedral = he pronounced it eye-CO'-so-drul, leaving out the “he” altogether
Cepheid = he pronounced it sef-ide (long “i”)
Chirality = he pronounced it chur-ality (“ch” as in church) should be ki-rality hard “k” and long “i”
Fermilab = he pronounced it fur-mu-lab
Fermi Gamma-ray Telescope= he pronounced it fur-my
Fullerene (as in Buckminsterfullerene) he pronounced it fuller-un (short u or schwa)
He left the “-“ sign off the exponent when reading about an extremely tiny value. Said “10 to the 36” instead it should have been “10 to the minus 36”. It might make a difference!
This was a case of an actor with no scientific knowledge reading something he had never heard of. Where are the directors on such a performance?
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4 people found this helpful
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- P. C.
- 06-18-18
Well-Written, Easy to Understand
Well-written and well-read. Very understandable and easy to comprehend; clear English. Made for the layman.
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- Toby
- 09-03-17
Needs to be re-narrated
Someone who can pronounce the words used in this book should re-record it... Awful, awful mispronunciations abound!! Don’t buy this audio book.... Read the book—that would be my best recommendation !!
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5 people found this helpful
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- Maxine
- 06-01-17
Somewhat annoying narration, but great book.
As mentioned in previous comments, the narrator's mispronunciations were pervasive and irritating. Although that regularly aggravated my OCD, I found the content of the book was entirely worth it, and often helped me ignore it.
As to the content itself, I was utterly astonished at the amount of astronomical evidence the author gave against currently accepted theories ranging from dark energy and dark matter to the expansion of the universe! I must note, however, that although I am personally still on the fence regarding multiverse theories, I found his refutations of these ideas lacking. For the interested listener, I highly suggest "The Mathematical Universe" by Max Tegmark which gives a clearer explanation of quantum decoherence and how it actually supports the Everretian multiverse as opposed to Mr. Stewart's misinterpretation. Overall, though, I do highly recommend this book, as I haven't seen most of his assertions in anything else I've read.
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- Great and powerful IDE
- 05-16-17
good read/listen for someone interested in Cosmos
loved it broke down the cosmos into very easy to understand and manageable numbers to give a good perspective of topics covered in book.
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- wbiro
- 10-24-18
Broad and Current, No Math
Covers a lot of ground, presents current challenges to current theories (formation of moon, Big Bang), and there is no math - it is mentioned, but not crunched. A bonus is the young narrator, who is, it can be reasonably assumed, is blissfully science-free, math-free, engineering-free, and history-free, where you are treated with a steady stream of mispronunciations (courtesy of our wonderful humanities).
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- David
- 08-20-22
Fine Story About Math and Cosmology
Read by someone who knows NOTHING about science and cosmology (or English).
How can anyone with a higher than grade 5 education blow the pronunciation of Pythagoras? Or RADII. Or apparently insist that the writer misspelled Access when talking about Cartesian geometry? Or mispronounce Laplace?
How can a director or producer allow this?
How could that darned author keep putting an extra c in eliptic? Geez.
(The word is ecliptic ya bonehead, and you 'corrected' it to the wrong word *at least* a dozen times, saying elliptic instead! Just so you know, *ecliptic* is the term for what was being talked about. Elliptic ISN'T.
As stated in other reviews, you should be seriously ashamed of your reading and very apparent lack even of general knowledge.)
Readers should listen for the story & info, but shun the narrator (and production house) in future.
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- Hendrick Mcdonald
- 01-11-17
Oddly Underwhelming for Stewart
I think I expected something more akin to The Science of Interstellar, but it was less that and more a history of discoveries in our solar system, with the last third on the wider universe. Found it generally underwhelming, with little more to say than "math is very exact and where there are questions in the data scientists have made discoveries." Meh.
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3 people found this helpful