The Fabric of the Cosmos - Brian Greene |
ISBN 0-141-01111-4 |
Brian Greene has made the mysteries of space and time accessible to millions with his acclaimed writings and award-winning TV series. Now, he takes us on an irresistible and revelatory journey through the biggest of the big questions: What is reality? Could we exist without space and time? Can we travel to the past? What are the limits of the universe? He reveals a world more beautiful and bizarre than we could have imagined: where ‘dark matter’ reigns, space warps and wiggles through eleven dimensions, minute particles dance, fizz and teleport across vast distances, everything is made of vibrating strings and, like an ant on a lily-pad, we may be floating on a sliver of space-time. Revealing new layers of reality that lie just beneath the surface of our everyday lives, this grand tour of the universe will make you look at the world in a completely new way.
One of our acquaintances who lives close by appears to have excelled at a wide variety of careers, professions and disciplines over what is, in fact, a very short number of years indeed!
It all started with the curtain making. Sarah was in the middle of fitting out her new small hotel and told us that she had gone to enormous trouble to make all the curtains herself – she was very good at that sort of thing. A couple of weeks later, we were having a cup of coffee in the new hotel when we met Jessica, who had been flown in from London, by Sarah, to deliver and hang the custom-made curtains. We said nothing.
But, a couple of weeks later, not long after we had met her down the valley, coming from her French lessons, Sarah told us, over dinner that, in fact, she had been a French Lecturer in a UK university. A couple of weeks later, whilst asking me some questions with regard to the French tax system, we learned, again directly from Sarah, that, in fact, whilst in the Royal Navy, she had also qualified as an accountant and solicitor – all in one go!
A dinner party or two later and we heard her explain to one of the other guests that, prior to moving to France, she had been a maths professor at Cambridge. Not to mention that fact that, yet another evening, she had been an English lecturer at Oxford.
I am sure that my wife will point out a further career or qualification or two that I have left out. What really gets me, though, is that the rest of us poor sods only manage to squeeze one or two qualifications in during our working lives.Issue No.: 005 : January 012, 2009 - LATEST NEWS |
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