Afbeelding van de auteur.

John Gerald Taylor (1931–2012)

Auteur van Black Holes

31+ Werken 438 Leden 4 Besprekingen

Over de Auteur

Werken van John Gerald Taylor

Black Holes (1973) 236 exemplaren
The Race for Consciousness (1999) 38 exemplaren
Science and the Supernatural (1980) 28 exemplaren
When the Clock Struck Zero (1993) 28 exemplaren
Superminds (1975) 26 exemplaren
The Mind: A User's Manual (2006) 19 exemplaren
Shape of Minds to Come (1971) 11 exemplaren
La nueva física (1972) 4 exemplaren
Tributes to Paul Dirac (1987) 4 exemplaren
Finite Superstrings (1992) 4 exemplaren

Gerelateerde werken

Explorations of the Marvellous (1976) — Medewerker — 44 exemplaren
Cosmology Now (1973) — Medewerker — 12 exemplaren

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Officiële naam
Taylor, John Gerald
Pseudoniemen en naamsvarianten
Taylor, J. G.
Geboortedatum
1931-08-18
Overlijdensdatum
2012-03-10
Geslacht
male
Nationaliteit
UK
Land (voor op de kaart)
England, UK
Geboorteplaats
Hayes, Kent, England, UK
Opleiding
University of Cambridge (Christ's College)
Beroepen
physicist
writer
actor
Organisaties
Kings College, University of London

Leden

Besprekingen

A rather dated discussion of cutting edge physics that wasn't really all that cutting edge when it was written. I agree with many of the premises included in this book, but found it to be rambling, repetitive, and boring. In addition, the author has a bad habit of not sourcing his material. He referred to something written by "a Russian biochemist" in 1936, but did not give the name of the biochemist, even though having the year and the name of the book should make that easy - and there was nothing in the bibliography that fit the description. He cited an Ogden Nash poem, but just cited it as "a poet" without any name - the infamous nameless poet who goes around writing things without telling us who he is? He makes some statements that are howlers, not just because the book is old, but that were really strange to say even 20 years ago, such as we would be using nuclear fusion for power in the near future. It's been some time since that has been believed by much of anyone in physics. Overall, a very disappointing book, and it doesn't read quickly. I really wish I had aborted it early. Instead, I stayed up a bit late to finish it and get it over with, because I was too far through to give up.… (meer)
½
 
Gemarkeerd
Devil_llama | Jul 29, 2016 |
I enjoyed this book very much when I read it in the late 70s. I'd been devouring a lot of science fiction, having moved from the space operas of E.E. "Doc" Smith to the "harder" SF of Isaac Asimov and Larry Niven, and was now wanting learn more about the facts behind the stories.

What I remember most about reading this book, however, is not the contents, but an incident that happened while I was reading it. I was waiting one winter evening at a bus stop when some passing yobs, presumably astounded at seeing somebody with a book outside of school, demanded to know what I was reading. I told them the title of the book and one of them made a vulgar comment about vaginas. Do I remember the comment because I enjoyed the book, or do I remember the book because of the comment?

On reflection, I think I remember the incident because I thought I was going to get beaten up for just for reading a book. I wasn't, though.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
Michael.Rimmer | 2 andere besprekingen | Mar 30, 2013 |
Not only is Taylor obdurately obscure when he is pretending to be explicating and explaining the astrophysical phenomena, he is also (wilfully?) misunderstanding and misrepresenting them. I am not sure if this or Zukav's Wu Li Masters is the worse book. (Not only poorer: worse.)
 
Gemarkeerd
ari.joki | 2 andere besprekingen | Dec 19, 2010 |
Read it, can't remember a darn thing about it.
 
Gemarkeerd
Karlstar | 2 andere besprekingen | Dec 11, 2018 |

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Statistieken

Werken
31
Ook door
2
Leden
438
Populariteit
#55,890
Waardering
3.0
Besprekingen
4
ISBNs
64
Talen
8

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