
From the dawn of humankind, men and women have looked at change--as wrought by weather, the seasons, and, most strikingly, the inexorable advance of time--as something essentially to be feared. And partially from this fear the great religions and mythologies have arisen, systems which gave meaning to the ever-changing world, and, quite often, immortality to ourselves. By the late nineteenth century, the quest for ultimate meanings became largely the province of science, and today, change still figures (on the surface, at least) as a malevolent force: most of the cosmological theories formulated in recent years predict the ultimate extinction of the world by universal entropy.Bringing together the evidence and insights of biology and physics, of astronomy and cosmology, Louise Young offers a profoundly original and stirring vision of order, form, change, and the creative forces in the universe. Opposing the long-held beliefs of many scientists that the universe is running down and will eventually collapse upon itself, Young eloquently argues that the tendency toward increasing entropy is merely one aspect of a single process that is creating more complex, highly organized, and more efficient forms of matter all the time, and at every level--from the microscopic to the stellar.In vivid, compelling prose, Louise Young--an award-winning writer on science and a former physicist--takes us on an unforgettable tour of the world around us, showing how even the most ordinary aspects of life and the universe display a strangely beautiful symmetry. She clearly demonstrates that creation was not simply some big-bang eons ago, but rather is an ongoing process, one in which we are both witnesses and participants. Illustrating her findings with many remarkable photographs and fascinating examples ranging from geology to animal behavior, and from oceanography to genetics, Young gracefully canvasses the themes of growth, change creativity, and the mystery of the universe in a book th
Does the universe inevitably trend toward total entropy and extinction, or is it an ongoing process of increasing complexity and creative organization? Louise B. Young, a former physicist and accomplished science writer, synthesizes evidence from biology, astronomy, and geology to challenge the prevailing scientific consensus of a dying universe. She argues that the observed tendency toward entropy is only one component of a larger, constructive process that continuously generates higher levels of order and efficiency across all scales of existence.
What You Will Find
Experts and readers recognize this work as a thoughtful, accessible bridge between complex physical theories and broader philosophical inquiry. The text is noted for its ability to synthesize disparate scientific fields into a cohesive argument without sacrificing clarity for a general audience.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
1993-01-28
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195080394
ISBN-13:
9780195080391
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