The End of Certainty

time, chaos, and the new laws of nature

228 pages

English language

Published Dec. 15, 1997 by Free Press.

ISBN:
978-0-684-83705-5
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

3 stars (1 review)

Time, the fundamental dimension of our existence, has fascinated artists, philosophers, and scientists of every culture and every century. All of us can remember a moment as a child when time became a personal reality, when we realized what a "year" was, or asked ourselves when "now" happened. Common sense says time moves forward, never backward, from cradle to grave. Nevertheless, Einstein said that time is an illusion. Nature's laws, as he and Newton defined them, describe a timeless, deterministic universe within which we can make predictions with complete certainty. In effect, these great physicists contended that time is reversible and thus meaningless.

2 editions

Will have to find one of his compatriots who's a philosopher

3 stars

Time is a population-level phenomenon, physics that has focused on integrable time-reversible solutions has discounted the aspects of dynamics that help us understand self-organization, creativity, and life, all bound up with the chaotic entropic uncertainty that time's arrow creates. As expected even in this "pop" treatment there's a lot of math I'm ill-suited to evaluate.

Subjects

  • Science -- Philosophy.
  • Space and time.
  • Chaotic behavior in systems.
  • Natural history.