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List Price: £20.00
Our Price: £10.98
Author:
Stephen William Hawking
By Bantam Press
The Universe in a Nutshell attempts to address the relative difficulty of Hawking's first foray into popular science, A Brief History of Time. While this sold in its millions, few readers got past the first few chapters. Helpfully, this new work is full of beautifully prepared colour illustrations and decorations, and has a "tree-like" structure, so that readers can skip from chapter to chapter without losing the thread. In 200 highly illustrated pages, Hawking is pushing the frontiers of popular physics beyond relativity and quantum theory, past superstring theory and imaginary time, into a dizzying new world of M-theory and branes. It's a colossal venture--one Hawking is uniquely qualified to undertake--but it is crammed into far too small a space. When you consider the other rather good tomes being written on the nature of consciousness these days, the decision to limit The Universe in a Nutshell to the dictates of publishing rather than to the natural parameters of the material is an unfortunate one. Worse, Hawking tries to paper over the complexity of his field. He rushes over the very concepts he should be helping us understand, only to belabour sim...
Universe in a Nutshell review, 2005-01-14 I think this book has a broad appeal for all readers that have an interest in science. When I first bought the book I was worried thet it would be too complicated because my area of expertise is law not science, but it is explained in an interesting and simple way with illustrations and minimal use of maths! Not only will you get an idea of the science behind this book but it will also leave you with philisophical thoughts about the universe and the mysteries that are incomprehensable and yet to be solved.
List Price: £10.95
Our Price: £6.99
Author:
John Hebborn, Jean Littlewood
By Heinemann Educational Publishers
M3 - Perhaps only for the few who do further maths, 2003-11-14 M3 is not an easy module.To be quite honest, I found D1 a lot easier. However, the hefty tome that is M3 is packed quite full of example questions and sample exam questions. Really, if you are considering taking this paper, and cannot recognise yourself when there is a mistake in the back of the book, then you might have some difficulty. Even so, I would encourage those who wish to to use this book, it does actually work through everything satisfactorally, although occasionally as with most things with the new AS system, it sometimes leaves you hanging, telling you that you don't need to know this, but it will be shown in book Mn, where n is a number greater than the one you are currently on. This aside, a good book.
List Price: £35.00
Our Price: £33.25
Author:
Steve Adams, Jonathan Allday
By OUP Oxford
The best by far, 2008-04-08 I bought this book because I am going to teach A level Physics after a few years just doing GCSE. It is excellent, the authors manage to take a topic through the simple early stages of understanding up to really quite detailed high brow stuff very smoothly. There is help with the maths too, which is often the stumbling block for many A level students. It appears to cover the 2008 changes in the course and many other topics beyond. I look forward to using as my manual for my teaching and I shall recommend it to my students.
List Price: £9.99
Our Price: £3.85
Author:
James Gleick
By Vintage
Few writers distinguish themselves by their ability to write about complicated, even obscure topics clearly and engagingly. In Chaos, James Gleick, a former science writer for the New York Times, shows that he resides in this exclusive category. Here he takes on the job of depicting the first years of the study of chaos--the seemingly random patterns that characterise many natural phenomena. This is not a purely technical book. Instead, it focuses as much on the scientists studying chaos as on the chaos itself. In the pages of Gleick's book, the reader meets dozens of extraordinary and eccentric people. For instance, Mitchell Feigenbaum, who constructed and regulated his life by a 26-hour clock and watched his waking hours come in and out of phase with those of his coworkers at Los Alamos National Laboratory. As for chaos itself, Gleick does an outstanding job of explaining the thought processes and investigative techniques that researchers bring to bear on chaos problems. Rather than attempt to explain Julia sets, Lorenz attractors and the Mandelbrot Set with gigantically complicated equations, Chaos relies on sketches, photographs and Gleick's wonderful descri...
New wisdom, 2007-05-18 I love this book because of its association with systems theory and the concept of emergent properties. I also find the story about the struggle to get the ideas accepted by the establishment very reminiscent of the struggle to get new ideas into the world of work.
List Price: £7.99
Our Price: £2.79
Author:
John Polkinghorne
By Oxford Paperbacks
Brilliant - and I've read a few books on this subject..., 2005-01-19 I have read a quite few 'pop science' books on this subject and this is the most lucid and enjoyable I have read. It encapsulates the main ideas so clearly and for once I understood the central mystery of quantum behaviour.I don't care about the error that another reviewer got excited about as it doesn't make any material difference to the level of understanding I wanted to get to. And, unlike another reviewer, I find Mr Tomkins both dull and patronising. This book, in contrast, is extremely well written and never patronising. I was extremely impressed and awed by the mastery of the subject the author has and that was demonstrated by the fact that he could explain the subject to a mathematical cretin like me...
List Price: £8.99
Our Price: £3.59
Author:
Richard P. Feynman
By Penguin Books Ltd
Finally, a book about what is known, 2007-01-30 Unlike many books relating to quantum mechanics, and the strange universe that exists on the quantum scale, this book is dedicated to a subject that is known and (as far as can be said about anything relating to the quantum scale) understood.
This book does a superb job of explaining to the layman (such as myself) what quantum electrodynamics is, and restricts itself to doing just that job and doing it well.
List Price: £57.00
Our Price: £45.60
Author:
Paul Horowitz, Winfield Hill
By Cambridge University Press
A classic! The first serious book about electronics you should buy!, 2007-03-12 If you are thinking about buying a book about electronics don't wait any longer. It is the most popular and complete book you can have. You will find everything you may ever want to know about electronics, designing electronics circuits, calculations, etc. It is not a book for beginners, though. There are plenty of mathematics, charts, definitions. It is great as a compendium for engineers and something you should buy if you no longer want to be a beginner.
List Price: £41.99
Our Price: £39.19
Author:
Paul A. Tipler, Gene P. Mosca
By W.H.Freeman & Co Ltd
BUY THIS BOOK!!!!, 2007-02-06 Tipler is excellent!!! - If you're doing 1st year physics this book is an essential buy!
It takes you though the key concepts of each topic and tells you everything you need to know, the examples are clear and written in simple, plain English.
It's especially usefully when you've forgotten something really simple and all your other books assume you already know it. Tipler tells you everything!!
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