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08.09.2019by admin
The Hidden Reality:
Parallel Universes and the Deep Laws of the Cosmos
AuthorBrian Greene
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectMultiverse
GenreNon-fiction
PublisherAlfred A. Knopf
Publication date
January 25, 2011
Media typePrint, e-book, audiobook
Pages384 pp.
ISBN978-0307265630
Preceded byIcarus at the Edge of Time
  1. Fabric Of The Cosmos Epub Download
  2. Nova Fabric Of The Cosmos
Brian Greene talks about The Hidden Reality on Bookbits radio.

Gears of war 3 pepakura files helmet. The Hidden Reality: Parallel Universes and the Deep Laws of the Cosmos is a book by Brian Greene published in 2011 which explores the concept of the multiverse and the possibility of parallel universes. It has been nominated for the Royal Society Winton Prize for Science Books for 2012.

  • 4See also

Content[edit]

In his book, Greene discussed nine types of parallel universes:

  • The quilted multiverse conditions in an infinite universe necessarily repeat across space, yielding parallel worlds.
  • The inflationary multiverse says that eternal cosmological inflation yields an enormous network of bubble universes, of which our universe would be one.
  • The brane multiverse states that in M-theory, in the brane world scenario, our universe exists on one three-dimensional brane, which floats in a higher dimensional expanse potentially populated by other branes – other parallel universes.
  • The cyclic multiverse is saying that collisions between braneworlds can manifest as big bang-like beginnings, yielding universes that are parallel in time.
  • The landscape multiverse states that by combining inflationary cosmology and string theory, the many different shapes for string theory's extra dimensions give rise to many different bubble universes.
  • The quantum multiverse creates a new universe when a diversion in events occurs, as in the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics.
  • The holographic multiverse is derived from the theory that the surface area of a space can simulate the volume of the region.
  • The simulated multiverse implies that technological leaps suggest that the universe is just a simulation.
  • The ultimate multiverse is the ultimate theory, saying the principle of fecundity asserts that every possible universe is a real universe, thereby obviating the question of why one possibility – ours – is special. These universes instantiate all possible mathematical equations.

Fabric of cosmos book epub Oh, actually the underlying theme to the book is how do we understand the concepts of space and time, or spacetime, which is one of the problems of understanding why the water in the fabric of cosmos book does what it does when it is spun around.

  1. The bestselling author of The Elegant Universe and The Fabric of the Cosmos tackles perhaps the most mind-bending question in modern physics and cosmology. Jan 25, 2011 384 Pages Buy. Audiobook Download $22.50. Jan 25, 2011 840 Minutes Buy. The Hidden Reality by Brian Greene.
  2. Download The Fabric of the Cosmos Brian Greene PDF Book This is a great The Fabric of the Cosmos Brian Greene that does an excellent job of explaining some of the toughest ideas in modern physics. My only criticism is that Greene can't figure out who his audience is: there's an odd the fabric of the cosmos pdf download.

Reception[edit]

  • Timothy Ferris reports in the review in The New York Times Book Review that “If extraterrestrials landed tomorrow and demanded to know what the human mind is capable of accomplishing, we could do worse than to hand them a copy of this book.”[1]
  • Anthony Doerr, in his On Science column of the Boston Globe, wrote that 'Greene might be the best intermediary I’ve found between the sparkling, absolute zero world of mathematics and the warm, clumsy world of human language.' Doerr praised Greene's use of analogies to explain the complex phenomena of parallel universes.[2]
  • John Gribbin, in the Wall Street Journal, declared that The Hidden Reality was 'Mr. Greene's weakest book', but conceded that Greene's earlier books 'left him with such high standards to live up to that this is not really surprising.' Gribbin also criticized the lack of depth on certain subjects, such as M-theory and the interactions of three-dimensional universes.[3]
  • Publishers Weekly hails The Hidden Reality “An in-depth yet marvelously accessible look inside the perplexing world of modern theoretical physics and cosmology . . . Greene presents a lucid, intriguing, and triumphantly understandable state-of-the-art look at the universe.”(Starred review)
  • Janet Maslin, The New York Times claims “Mr. Greene has a gift for elucidating big ideas . . . Exciting and rewarding . . . [The Hidden Reality] captures and engages the imagination.”[4]
  • John Horgan. Scientific American 'Is speculation in multiverses as immoral as speculation in subprime mortgages?.' 'Horgan’s exasperation with seeing the multiverse heavily promoted by famous physicists appears to have more to do with the idea that this is a retreat by physicists from engagement with the real world, something morally obtuse in an era of growing problems that scientists could help address.' [5]
  • Lee Smolin '.. discussions of a multiverse containing infinite numbers of copies of ourselves behaving slightly differently made him uneasy for moral reasons. The worry is that one might be led to stop caring that much about the implications of one’s actions. After all, whatever mistake you make, in some other infinite number of universes, you didn’t do it.' [5]
  • Peter Woit 'My own moral concerns about the multiverse have more to do with worry that pseudo-science is being heavily promoted to the public, leading to the danger that it will ultimately take over from science, first in the field of fundamental physics, then perhaps spreading to others.[5]

Popular culture[edit]

The book and its author were featured on the television series The Big Bang Theory in episode 20 of season 4, 'The Herb Garden Germination'.[6]

See also[edit]

Related books[edit]

  • Brian Greene, The Fabric of the Cosmos (2004)
  • Lisa Randall, Warped Passages (2005)
  • Michio Kaku, Parallel Worlds (book) (2004)
  • Leonard Susskind, The Cosmic Landscape (2005)
  • Alexander Vilenkin, Many Worlds in One: The Search for Other Universes (July 2006)
  • Sean Carroll, From Eternity to Here
  • John Gribbin, In Search of the Multiverse
  • Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow, The Grand Design (book)
  • Steven Manly, Visions of the Multiverse
  • Richard Panek, The 4 Percent Universe (2011)

Footnotes[edit]

  1. ^Ferris, Timothy (4 February 2011). 'Expanding Horizons'. The New York Times Sunday Book Review. Retrieved 21 September 2011.
  2. ^Doerr, Anthony; On Science (23 January 2011). 'Chasing Pythagoras and parallel universes'. The Boston Globe. Retrieved 21 September 2011.
  3. ^Gribbin, John (26 January 2011). 'Welcome to the Multiverse: Our universe may be just one among an infinite number—some supporting life, others sterile'. Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 21 September 2011.
  4. ^Maslin, Janet (26 January 2011). 'Multiple-Universe Theory Made, Well, Easier'. The New York Times. Retrieved 21 September 2011.
  5. ^ abc'Is the Multiverse Immoral?'.
  6. ^Amazon: The Hidden Reality: Parallel Universes and the Deep Laws of the Cosmos
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Preview — The Fabric of the Cosmos by Brian Greene

From Brian Greene, one of the world’s leading physicists and author the Pulitzer Prize finalist The Elegant Universe, comes a grand tour of the universe that makes us look at reality in a completely different way.
Space and time form the very fabric of the cosmos. Yet they remain among the most mysterious of concepts. Is space an entity? Why does time have a direction? Coul
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Published 2004 by Alfred Knopf (first published 2003)
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John A.arcticlight, I agree totally. I read this over a seven month period and most days only read a couple of pages. It was a great introduction for me who…morearcticlight, I agree totally. I read this over a seven month period and most days only read a couple of pages. It was a great introduction for me who have only HS science from over 50 years ago. (less)
Craig WandererI realize this is a old post, but for others I will recommend 'Astrophysics for people in a Hurry' or 'The Grand Design' for first time books.
While…more
I realize this is a old post, but for others I will recommend 'Astrophysics for people in a Hurry' or 'The Grand Design' for first time books.
While Green tries to be entertaining, I have had a hard time focusing despite this not being even close to my first book on Cosmology.
Usually I cannot put these books down but I am struggling, I find him and Mccacu on the same level, smart as hell but despite their best efforts, not able to relate very well on paper.
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Rating details

Mar 13, 2011Greg rated it it was amazing
I like to talk shit about science sometimes. Sometimes it's just to push people's buttons and other times it's because of the pop side of science is ridiculous (you know like the studies that get quoted on your web-browsers start-up page, which may even be contradicted a few days from now by some other article, or all those fucking pharmaceutical ad's on TV. Hey, thanks Pfizer for helping make me a drug addict!). I just made a slight at pop-science and that is hypocritical of me, it's really the..more
Jan 30, 2009Trevor rated it liked it
Did you know that Schrödinger’s equation is a perfect anagram of “A Second Herring Quits”? And is a near perfect anagram of “Surely someone’s taking the piss”? The second anagram relies, of course (and almost entirely), on a rather judicious application of Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle – but I do think that one may be more illuminating of how I’m finding some of the quantum mechanical experiments described in this book.
There is part of me that would like to believe that in the early part o
..more
Oct 18, 2018Manuel Antão rated it it was ok
Fabric of the cosmos epub downloads free
If you're into stuff like this, you can read the full review.
Going Overboard: 'The Fabric of the Cosmos' by Brian Greene
(original review, 2004)
'Within each individual [time] slice, your thoughts and memories are sufficiently rich to yield a sense that time has continuously flowed to that moment. This feeling, this sensation that time is flowing, doesn't require previous moments—previous frames—to be 'sequentially illuminated.'
In 'The Fabric of the Cosmos' by Brian Greene
I agree that this is at l
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Jan 07, 2013WarpDrive rated it it was amazing
Wow, what a wonderful book. What a ride it was.
Brian is definitely one of the best science popularisers about, hands down. It is amazing how he manages to convey potentially complex subjects, such as quantum mechanics and relativity, in a simple but at the same time rigorous manner. And he does that with a contagious enthusiasm which reminded to me why I love physics. I also greatly appreciated the fact that he never gets into the game (like so frequently happens in popular science books, unfor
..more
Dec 07, 2014Stian rated it liked it · review of another edition
Let's start with the positives:
Greene does an excellent job of explaining very hard-to-understand concepts in non-mathematical ways. That said, I think it was unecessary to use popular culture the way he did. It feels silly, reading about Einstein and general relativity and getting an example which uses the Kwik-E-Mart, Bart, and Lisa and so forth. But okay, I admit that this is a fairly small detail that shouldn't take too much away from the overall experience. The important thing is that the
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May 06, 2009Kristen added it
I GIVE UP
You win this round science book **(shakes fist in anger)**
In fact, after reading this book I've given up on science completely in favor the Nabokovian theory of very young earth creationism: The World Was Created This Morning.
'Theoretically there is no absolute proof that one's awakening in the morning (the finding oneself again in the saddle of one's personality) is not really a quite unprecedented event, a perfectly original birth.'
Yeah, that does make a bit more sense than most of
..more
Dec 04, 2007Jen Padgett Bohle rated it

Fabric Of The Cosmos Epub Download

liked it
Recommends it for: tenacious liberal arts majors and science geeks
Hmmm..I can now talk basics about String Theory and physics at a cocktail party. Get me into anything more than general commentary, discoveries, famous names and famous theories, and I'm completely at a loss. Green is a likable and passionate author, but for readers without a physics knowledge base, his little treatise is tough going, even with all the Simpsons references. I remember the most important concepts, but the intricacies didn't stick with me. This book is best read in segments, prefe..more
Aug 06, 2007Joe rated it really liked it · review of another edition
You probably know more about physics than you think.
See, right there, when your brain registered the p-word, a black hole of anxiety opened up in the pit of your stomach from which nothing can escape. Your underarms began to radiate heat as your mind conjured memories of stuffy high school laboratories. And as your eyes scanned ahead for those dreaded half-English, half-Greek words followed by an equal sign, the probability of you reading on fast approached zero.
But there’s hope! Whether you re
..more
What an incredible journey this was. I think Brian is fantastically gifted to explain esoteric and cutting-edge cosmological concepts without the use of formulae and maths. He says himself that he will only use metaphors to explain the ideas, but even so he remains respectful of his subject, he does not dumb things down, and I found the metaphors for the most part evocative and helpful. Towards the end of the book, however, the ideas get so far removed from human intuition that I would have want..more
Jan 26, 2012Paul Perry rated it it was amazing
Recommends it for: anyone wanting to understand our universe
Shelves: male-author, non-fiction, re-read, physics, read-in-2015, science, read-in-2012
Glancing at the reviews for Brian Greene's overview of how we view the stuff of which our universe is made, it seems that some people base their rating and opinion on how much they agree with the science, or how credible they find it. While I have read a fair few popular science books – especially in the areas of physics and cosmology, areas I find utterly fascinating and about which I am perplexed that anyone can not be astounded and beguiled – I have to assume that I am reading a fair explanat..more
Being utterly unscientific (I still believe toasters toast toast by invoking thrice the name of said bread and summoning forth a kind of crisping deity), I pounce on shit for the lay reader. Sacks, Sagan, Ramachandran, Richard Simmons, etc. I had never heard of Brian Greene and have typically held physics and such things at arm's length, with my other hand pinching my nose shut as if holding the world's most curious diaper: there is probably much of interest within to parse out, but noxious enou..more
Jan 21, 2019Andrew rated it really liked it · review of another edition
This was as very confounding book to me - not confusing but confounding. It has some amazing observations and conundrums to ponder over and I suspect I did not appreciate (or even understand all that it had to tell me).
Let me explain - some of the chapters used examples - some of which I have actually studied in my years in education. For example the example where electrons can be treated as particles while at the same time be treated as waves. Now I remember the experiments and I remember the t
..more
Jul 24, 2009DJ rated it really liked it
If mathematically challenged aliens (who had somehow acquired a spacecraft) landed on Earth and requested a single book to sum up our species' understanding of space, time, and physics, we would do best to give them The Fabric of the Cosmos.
Pop sci books on physics have a nasty habit of either aiming too general and leaving the reader with only a fuzzy sense of awe or aiming too specific and leaving the reader with a few random facts and a general confusion over how scientists can get so excited
..more
Apr 09, 2019Hamid rated it it was amazing
A very good book on the concept of space and what it's made of explained in a clear and simple yet comprehensive manner by a brilliant physicist. You also learn a little about string theory and quantum loop theory and how they strive to come up with a theory of quantum gravity.
Apr 11, 2015Wayne Barrett rated it really liked it
“Cosmology is among the oldest subjects to captivate our species. And it’s no wonder. We’re storytellers, and what could be more grand than the story of creation?”
Admittedly, my head was spinning quite a bit during this read. After all, trying to understand quantum physics is something my brain just isn't wired to do.
I love science, and even though volumes like this can be a task to get through, I am always left enlightened and amazed at the facts and philosophies of existence and all that it e
..more
This is a great book that does an excellent job of explaining some of the toughest ideas in modern physics. My only criticism is that Greene can't figure out who his audience is: there's an odd mix of esoterica and the mundane. Most of the esoteric stuff is banished to the footnotes, which are well worth reading--and I suppose I should be happy that it's there at all, since most books on modern science are written with Hawking's Editor's Law in mind: with each equation, your audience shrinks by..more
Cosmos
Feb 17, 2019Josh Friedlander rated it really liked it
Periodically I get inspired to read big science books aimed at clarifying things to laypeople without any maths. Generally, each time I get slightly further than I did the previous time before eventually losing focus and coasting to the end. This was one of those times. Greene is a competent writer (though ugh, his cheesy TV analogies were not needed), and Smart Science Guy straight out of Central Casting - a graduate of Harvard and Oxford, a happily married vegetarian and accomplished pianist...more
Apr 24, 2015aPriL does feral sometimes rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: twisted-my-synapses-peculiar, illuminating, science, non-fiction, math-horrors-involved, favorites
I wish I could say 'The Fabric of the Cosmos' is an easy read which makes clear a subject that only geniuses understand normally about what classic physics and quantum mechanics have to do with understanding the mysteries of cosmology, particularly the theories regarding what the universe is, how it began, what made it function the way it does and why there seems to be an arrow of Time. I can't. Physics is too hard for me. However, Brian Greene is a brilliant man with a teacher's magic talent of..more
This is a nice overview of modern physics, including implications of relativity (specific and general), quantum mechanics and string theory, together with a discussion of the implications for cosmology. Some of the interesting items discussed here include the notion that during the 'Planck time', ie, 10^(-34) sec or so after the Big Bang, space and time had no meaning, that our 3-D universe may be only an illusion of an underlying 11-dimensional universe, and reality may be coded in a cosmic 'ho..more
I finally finished Brian Greene's Fabric of the Cosmos and I am more confused than ever about string theory, M-theory and the nature of spacetime.
I feel as though I should read the book again. I guess at least now I am familiar enough with the concepts which confuse me to be able to sound like I know something about general relativity, quantum mechanics and string theory over beers with friends, and that's the important thing, right?
Greene uses lots of pop cultural referenced examples to illustr
..more
Mar 13, 2018Melinda rated it really liked it
Well I finished this book. Pretty sure I didn’t understand a lot of it..but that’s on me not the author. That aside I thought this was a beautifully written book. Well researched, interesting and well written. I think I learnt some things..but expect another read would be needed to absorb more of the content.
Apr 28, 2019Sotiris Makrygiannis rated it really liked it
This book breaks down the fabric of the cosmos into details and what we know. Very extensive, very well written and rather easy to understand.
Jul 01, 2013John rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Lots of really interesting things in this book. I didn't realize physics had progressed so far in finding a unification theory.
What I found most interesting would probably horrify the author because, while he didn't say so in so many words, he apparently really believes that physics is, or can be, the answer to everything. I, on the other hand, believe there is a God, the Christian God, who has a hand in our existence.
I have always thought it curious that descriptions of God or angels appearing
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Epub
Once again, as in 'The Elegant Universe,' Greene has done an exemplary job of presenting a 'popular' explication of deep science (particle physics and cosmology) that is neither condescending nor watered down.
I've been amazed both times than anyone could pull this off, since it's been attempted so often but left the subjects either impenetrable or eviscerated.
Greene's salient attribute is clarity: He can find and present the basic contours of just about any scientific discipline in clear, disci
..more
Jan 24, 2010Liz rated it liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: gouge-my-eyes-out, non-fiction, theoretical-physics, books-i-own
Did Greene plagiarise a section of his book? More on that later.
Oh, god, I'm surprised I finished it. For the most part, I enjoy theoretical physics. I'm not sure if I believe everything that theoretical physics proposes (but then again, I'm not one for blindly allowing myself to be pulled along by an entity I can't see), but I enjoy it nonetheless. And I wanted to enjoy this book, I really did. Greene offers some thought provoking ideas, and he even mentions at one point the author of one of my
..more
Jun 28, 2015Brilliant Hope rated it it was amazing
I have not finished it yet :)) but to be honest
Stunning book,erudite author made me read his books with passion actually this is the second book I read for prof.Brian greene ,I admire his resilience in explanation ,this feature is extremely rare with other cosmologists, he could show me another realm away from my own perspective
I acquired many remarkable transformations in my ideas about the universe which I used to think it No longer had to be altered
More profoundly talking I believe now that
..more
Aug 21, 2014Mel rated it it was amazing
The book focused mainly on the concepts of space and time, and how they build the universe around us. Starting with the concept of space and how that's changed over the years, then time and how that's changed and now the concept of spacetime, and then the universe itself. A large part of the book was used trying to explain, 'time's arrow' why things go forward but never backwards, why entropy is always greater in the future and never the past. It was all very interesting. At times I did get a bi..more
Feb 10, 2013Ivan Vuković rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
This is as fine (or very near) as popular physics goes. Although the book is maybe a bit too simple at times, I really enjoyed how Greene is able to present some very difficult concepts by gradually building up ideas. Instead of jumping over here and over there, he leads the reader in a very precise (well, as precise as you can get without serious mathematics) and logical manner which seems to be satisfying both to the layman and to the expert. Excellent!
Sep 08, 2011Gary Beauregard Bottomley rated it it was amazing
'A First step for understanding the universe.'
He mentions in the beginning that a refutation for the Albert Camus question why don't we all just commit suicide is because we can learn about the universe and discover our place in it while we're alive. After reading this book, you'll always have unfinished business in discovering more and more about the universe. This book is a very good intro to physics and discovering about the universe.
Mar 23, 2015Mishehu rated it it was amazing · review of another edition

Nova Fabric Of The Cosmos

Another brilliant addition to the pop physics literature from Greene. In a word: wow! It doesn't get better (or more fascinating, or more clearly and compellingly explained) than this. Very cool to know that the existence of the Higgs particle/field that Greene discussed at length has since been verified by the LHC. Awaiting experimental confirmation of micro black holes, strings, branes, ..
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Science Book Club:The Fabric of the Cosmos 3 23Mar 31, 2018 10:31AM
Science and Inquiry:*April 2015 - Fabric of the Cosmos 14 100Dec 11, 2015 10:46PM
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Brian Greene is an American theoretical physicist and one of the best-known string theorists. He has been a professor of physics and mathematics at Columbia University since 1996. He has become known to a wider audience through his books for the general public and a related PBS television special.
“Cosmology is among the oldest subjects to captivate our species. And it’s no wonder. We’re storytellers, and what could be more grand than the story of creation?” — 40 likes
“Understanding requires insight. Insight must be anchored.” — 32 likes
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