What is time?
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
What is time?
Oxford University Press, 2003
- : pbk
- Other Title
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What is time? : the classic account of the nature of time
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Note
First published 1972 by Thames & Hudson Ltd., London
Includes bibliographical references (p. 145-160) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
G. J. Whitrow (1912-2000) begins this classic exploration of the nature of time with a story about a Russian poet, visiting London before the First World War. The poet's English was not too good and when he asked a man in the street, 'Please, what is time?' he received the response, 'But that's a philosophical question. Why ask me?'.
Starting from this simple anecdote, Professor Whitrow takes us on a good-humoured and wide-ranging tour of the thing that clocks keep (more or less). He discusses how our ideas of time originated; how far they are inborn in plants and animals; how time has been measured, from sundial and hourglass to the caesium clock, and whether time possesses a beginning, a direction, and an end. He coaxes the diffident layman to contemplate with pleasure the differences between cyclic, linear, biological, cosmic, and space-time, and he provides frequent diversions into fascinating topics such as the Mayan calendar, the migration of birds, the dances of bees, precognition, and the short, crowded lives of mu-mesons, particles produced by cosmic-ray showers that exist for just two millionths of a second.
This reissue of the classic and authoritative What is Time? includes a new introduction by Dr J. T. Fraser, founder of the International Society for the Study of Time, and a bibliographic essay by Dr Fraser and Professor M. P. Soulsby of the Pennsylvania State University.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. The Origin of Our Idea of Time
- 2. Time and Ourselves
- 3. Biological Clocks
- 4. The Measurement of Time
- 5. Time and Relativity
- 6. Time, Gravitation and the Universe
- 7. The Origin and Arrow of Time
- 8. The Significance of Time
- Appendix: Temporal Order in Special Relativity
- Bibliography
- Index
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