Author:John D. Barrow
The constants of nature are the numbers that define the essence of the Universe. They tell us how strong its forces are, and what its fundamental laws can do: the strength of gravity, of magnetism, the speed of light, and the masses of the smallest particles of matter. They encode the deepest secrets of the Universe and express at once our greatest knowledge and our greatest ignorance about the cosmos. Their existence has taught us the profound truth that Nature abounds with unseen regularities. Yet, while we have become skilled at measuring the values of these constants, our frustrating inability to explain or predict their values shows how much we still have to learn about the inner workings of the Universe.
What is the ultimate status of these constants of Nature? Are they truly constant? Could life have evolved and persisted if they were even slightly different? And are there other Universes where they are different?
These are some of the issues that this book grapples with. It looks back to the discoveries of the first constants of Nature and the impact they had on scientists like Einstein. This book also tells the story of a tantalising new development in astronomy. For the first time astronomical observations are suggesting that some of the constants of Nature were different when the Universe was younger. So are our laws of Nature slowly changing? Is anything about our Universe immune from the ravages of time? Are there any constants of Nature at all?
His appeal lies in a winning way with historical anecdote and apt quotation and a forceful eloquence
—— Sunday TelegraphA distinguished cosmologist
—— Sunday TimesBarrow is a fantastic storyteller. The book is full of wonderful moments, vignettes that you will want to remember
—— GuardianAn ambitious and thought-provoking attempt to rewrite history from an ecological standpoint
—— IndependentLarge, ambitious and often enthralling, it is a successful attempt to look at the unfolding of world history from an entirely new perspective
—— Literary ReviewThe genius of Philip Roth...back at his imperious best in this heartbreaking tale... The eloquence of Roth's storytelling makes Nemesis one of his most haunting works
—— Daily MailCantor is one of Roth's best creations and the atmosphere of terror is masterfully fashioned
—— Tibor Fischer , Sunday TelegraphVery fine, very unsettling
—— Douglas Kennedy , The TimesA perfectly proportioned Greek tragedy played out against the background of the polio epidemic that swept Newark, New Jersey, during the summer of 1944
—— Adrian Turpin , Financial TimesOutstanding
—— Sunday TimesA 2011 favourite
—— Wendy Cope , Observer, Books of the YearThe year's most unusual travel book
[An] eye-opening and hugely enjoyable book
—— Daily TelegraphWritten in a delectable prose that scatters flashes of poetry over a sardonic undertow of social comment, Edgelands is a lyrical triumph. On Britain’s grotty margins, the duo trace “desire paths” to find beauty and mystery in the rough darkness on the edge of town
—— Boyd Tonkin , Independent