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Paperback Boojums All the Way Through: Communicating Science in a Prosaic Age Book

ISBN: 0521388805

ISBN13: 9780521388801

Boojums All the Way Through: Communicating Science in a Prosaic Age

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Book Overview

Boojums All the Way Through is a collection of essays that deals in a variety of ways with the problem of communicating modern physics to both physicists and non-physicists. The author is Professor David Mermin, a well-known theoretical physicist, who recently won the first Julius Edgar Lileinfeld prize of the American Physical Society 'for his remarkable clarity and wit as a lecturer to nonspecialists on difficult subjects'. David Mermin's wry humour...

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Oh my gosh, IT'S WONDERFUL

David Mermin is just incredibly great at explaining (with art and humor) things which a layperson might assume are out of reach. Thank you, David Mermin, for expanding my world and reflecting its mystery! I am such a huge fan of yours now. Keep writing for us! It was Louisa Gilder's mention of you in a video I saw online that tipped me off to you. Thank you, Louisa!

Cutting thru the very core of physics

This is a remarkable collection. Twenty-six essays by N.D. Mermin, Horace White Professor of Physics Emeritus at Cornell, and winner of the first Julias Edgar Lilienfeld prize of the American Physical Society 'for his remarkable clarity and wit as a lecturer to nonspecialists on difficult subjects'. This is the guy who managed to add the term "Boojum" to the vocabulary of physics, and who summarized the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics in just four words "Shut up and calculate". When reading this book, be prepared for more such gems. You will encounter deep truths about physical reality summarized in brief statements like "There is no time, only clocks". Mermin creates pure pedagogical jewels by defining "The Baseball Principle" (whether or not you watch baseball games on television has no effect on the statistics of the outcomes) and "The Strong Baseball Principle" (the baseball principle applied to one particular game), by arguing in favor of both, and then by going on to demonstrates that quantum mechanics leads to hard experimental facts that demonstrate the baseball principle can only be true if the strong baseball principle is binned. Puzzled? You should be. This cuts through the very core of quantum physics. The book will be an easy read if you are familiar with the principles of quantum mechanics and relativity at an undergraduate level. Less so, if you aren't. Is this a book for you? Have a look at Mermin's homepage: [...] . If you like the stuff you see there: don't hesitate and buy this collection of funny, puzzling and enlightening essays. You'll love it.

An idiosyncratic treasure

I suppose the title of this book steers a lot of junior physics people away from it. The author's name should steer these people back. This is the Mermin that Feynman complemented on his popular exposition on Bell's inequality. In fact that is the reason why I read this thing. After Wheeler's Quantum Measurement's book and Berstein's Quantum Profile's book I had to see what all the hoopla was about. Sure enough Mermin is the king of popular exposition and I've been through a lot of popular exposition on Bell's inequality...from Pagels to Penrose. This book is loaded with other expositories too on relativity and mathematics and general physics stuff. A good cheap read that will get you deeper into physics on a non-specialist level.
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