 Richard Coleman pushes both scientists and theologians past the paradigms of comparison and contrast, opposition and competition, and argues that two disciplines must challenge each other as each seeks to find truth from its own particular tradition. ... |  The author of "Time's Arrows, Cosmic Questions" and "Achilles in the Quantum Universe" offers a succinct explanation of three fundamental concepts in science: cosmic evolution, the search for the theory of matter, and the origins of life. 10 illustrations. ... |
 "In this extraordinary book, Parker traces nothing less than the current scientific version of the creation of the universe."-- The Antioch Review . An accessible overview of the evolution and development of our universe--from the Big Bang to cosmic strings. ... |  Earth's history is written in newly discovered craters--ranging to 3640 miles in diameter--which closed all geological eras and reset evolution. Global cracks became mid-ocean ridges and created the continents. ... |
 One of Five Volumes. Translated By E.C. Otte, B.H. Paul and W.S. Dallas. Bohn's Scientific Library. ... |  Two of Five Volumes. Translated By E.C. Otte, B.H. Paul and W.S. Dallas. Bohn's Scientific Library. ... |
 This book provides an up-to-date understanding of the progress and current problems of the interplay of nonlocality in the classical theories of gravitation and quantum theory. These problems lie on the border between general relativity and quantum physics, including quantum gravity. ... |  A quantitative account of the science of cosmology, designed for a non-specialist audience. ... |
 Based on four years of research, this study presents the search for a reasonable and scientific explanation on how the cosmos works and the role humans play within it. With a process of lateral thinking, this analysis breaks down the barriers between different disciplines of cosmic thought and presents a "theory of everything" which reconciles not only cosmology and particle physics, but also the issue of human consciousness. ... |  The twelve studies in this volume are centered around a fundamental question: what if man has understood nothing about the difference introduced by the 'Logos' between man and animal in Antiquity? Did we not overrate this distinction in Aristotle, or minimize it in the Stoics? Answering these and other questions demands a re-reading of the classical texts, forcing oneself to presuppose nothing and offering the reader a freshness beyond the known ... |