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Time One

Discover How the Universe Began

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Time One

By: Colin Gillespie
Narrated by: Derek Perkins
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About this listen

Time One tackles mankind's most baffling question: How did the world begin? After challenging old thinking about forty-seven crucial scientific problems, Time One author Colin Gillespie solves forty-five of them and comes up with a strikingly simple answer to the most perplexing question of them all: How did the world begin?

Time One takes an iconoclastic look at contemporary physics, notably relativity, quantum mechanics and string theory. It connects the dots across centuries of philosophy, literature and religion. Yet despite its formidable scope and breadth, it remains accessible and even lighthearted. It's the ultimate mystery, and it takes a fictional detective to solve it. The protagonist--a beach bum--takes his cues not only from the likes of Aristotle, Newton and Einstein but also from Lewis Carroll, Raymond Chandler, Frank Herbert--and even Mariah Carey--among many others. And the most helpful if least likely source is the imaginary detective who becomes his sidekick. One of the book's central (and most entertaining) premises is the detective's use of science's great stumbling blocks as clues to what happened before the Big Bang.

©2013 Colin Gillespie (P)2013 Audible Inc.
Philosophy Physics String Theory Black Hole Detective
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What listeners say about Time One

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too long

Too long. The author was searching for a way forward. Not believing the floored logic

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Deep and meaningful

I have been listening to various scientific and philosophical books recently. And also the occasional classic novel. This combines all three in an unique way that is both informative and entertaining. One of the best audio plus catalogue offers yet. Thanks

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Excellent book

Bit put off at the beginning because of how different it is to other books on the topic. In the end I couldn't stop listening. Great book and well worth a read!

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    1 out of 5 stars
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Huh?

What the hell is this? No way am I listening to 22 hours of this.

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Too many qotes

interesting ideas. The huge amounts of quotes at the start of each chapter put me off so I did not complete the book. Shame.

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Annoying

Listened to first few chapters, skipped through next ten, but it never achieves take off. Maybe there's a good book about a third of the length in there.

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I love detective fiction, but the pace kills it

The idea of making the development of non-classical physics a detective story has merit, but good detective fiction has pace, whith this doesn't. Chopped into 130 chapters (plus title, preface, introduction, cynasure(sp??), epilogue, post-partum), each with around a minute of quotes from other people, (most of which seem to have no relivence to the work) kills it for me. The narrator gives his best shot, and would be OK reading a Raymond Chandler, so I've given the performance a good mark, but I can't take the breaking up of the book into tiny parts. My player can be told to skip certain sections so I've gone through all 130+ sections and set it to skip over all the pointless stuff. That has taken out around 2 hours, and so, in total, about 10% of the book is other people's words. Perhaps the author has misunderstood the conventions of referencing others in a scientific work, perhaps he has no confidence in his own words, and so has used lots of other people's words. Its a shame, the idea is sound, just very badly implemented. It was included free in my membership, and I suppose you get what you pay for!

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