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When Einstein Walked with Gödel
When Einstein Walked with Gödel: Excursions to the Edge of Thought | Jim Holt
3 posts | 3 read | 1 to read
From Jim Holt, the New York Times bestselling author of Why Does the World Exist?, comes an entertaining and accessible guide to the most profound scientific and mathematical ideas of recent centuries in When Einstein Walked with Gödel: Excursions to the Edge of Thought. Does time exist? What is infinity? Why do mirrors reverse left and right but not up and down? In this scintillating collection, Holt explores the human mind, the cosmos, and the thinkers who’ve tried to encompass the latter with the former. With his trademark clarity and humor, Holt probes the mysteries of quantum mechanics, the quest for the foundations of mathematics, and the nature of logic and truth. Along the way, he offers intimate biographical sketches of celebrated and neglected thinkers, from the physicist Emmy Noether to the computing pioneer Alan Turing and the discoverer of fractals, Benoit Mandelbrot. Holt offers a painless and playful introduction to many of our most beautiful but least understood ideas, from Einsteinian relativity to string theory, and also invites us to consider why the greatest logician of the twentieth century believed the U.S. Constitution contained a terrible contradiction—and whether the universe truly has a future.
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Pinta
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Mehso-so

Essay collection. “My ideal is the cocktail-party chat: getting across a profound idea in a brisk and amusing way to an interested friend by stripping it down to its essence.†But it just feels awfully breezy and self-satisfied, floating through quantum mechanics, group theory, fractals, statistical regression, eugenics (!) as cocktail chatter. Popular science but too neatly packaged? Fave: Riemann Zeta conjecture and laughter. 2018

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Pedrocamacho
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Pickpick

This book has essays ranging from physics to mathematics to analytical philosophy. Overall, I enjoyed it; some essays were great and some weren‘t. The essays on Marcus/Kripke‘s rigid designators and on the Reimann Zeta Function were highlights.

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Dayvvin
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I think about anecdotes from this book on a nearly daily bases. In the first essay Einstein supports my general sense of the nature of time, and throughout the rest of the book math becomes an increasingly assessable / intriguing concept to even my lit-centric brain. Highly recommend