
At the dawn of science the ancient Greek philosopher Zeno formulated his paradox of motion, and amazingly, it is still on the cutting edge of all investigations into the fabric of reality.
Zeno used logic to argue that motion is impossible, and at the heart of his maddening puzzle is the nature of space and time. Is space-time continuous or broken up like a string of beads? Over the past two millennia, many of our greatest mindsaincluding Aristotle, Galileo, Newton, Einstein, Stephen Hawking, and other current theoreticiansahave been gripped by the mystery this puzzle represents.
Joseph Mazur, acclaimed author of "Euclid in the Rainforest," shows how historic breakthroughs in our understanding of motion shed light on Zenoas paradox. The orbits of the planets were explained, the laws of motion were revealed, the theory of relativity was discoveredabut the basic structure of time and space remained elusive.
In the tradition of "Fermatas Enigma" and "Zero, The Motion Paradox" is a lively history of this apparently simple puzzle whose solutionaif indeed it can be solvedawill reveal nothing less than the fundamental nature of reality.
| richard panchyk fawcett s e john waters timothy a judge atal bihari vajpayee | craig mcmurtry p n pandey bhola mahto hutton david v george t milkovich seema sanghi |