When you go to college, you will choose psychology and philosophy courses to challenge the reality of existence, because professors try to get your mind out of the box. Although this is a very good exercise, it has puzzled many students. Maybe I have a solution. Perhaps all these college students need to do is to consider the science behind them, that is, ask questions; what is our reality, then work backwards from there, and ask the professor the same questions.
If you want a book that will help you think about all of them, maybe you can learn more about what they do with particle physics in places like CERN, then I will give you a good advice. The name of this book is;
"Einstein's Space and Van Gogh's sky - physical reality and beyond", the author: Lawrence Leshan and Henry Margenau, MacMillan Publishers, New York, NY, 1982,268 Pages, ISBN: 0-02-570460-5.
Now, you don't have to be a new generation to enjoy the author's attempt to enjoy this book with hard science, quantum physics, and Einstein's most famous equations and theories to explain our current reality and reality. Think about other realities, or about the observations of everything we know about the world. The author first delved into how to understand and explain the concept of this alternating reality as well as the domain, the domain and the relatively realistic structure.
Although the book was written in 1982, one can look at it and see most of modern understanding, even the most recent philosophical theory of particle physics. In fact, when you complete the first part of the book, you will have a good grasp of the second and third parts. For the reader, the author has a good philosophical and scientific argument for relativity and truth, just like what it is, what it is, what it is, when and where it will happen, or it will happen.
You will enjoy a discussion about causality, feedback, purpose, reductionism, logic, and scientific theoretical verification, as authors may explain how their ideas are perfect with all of them. In the third part, um, this is where things get very interesting and profound; what is true, what is true, why it is real, or not. There is an interesting chapter about art, one about morality and the other about consciousness.
Although these authors seem to be writing from a liberal arts perspective, this makes people like me on the wall, their scientific use of theory and knowledge is quite good, so this book still exists in a label; the new era work.
Orignal From: Art and Science - Physics in our Natural World, Book Review
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