In Everything Forever Giorbran reveals timelessness in ways previously unimagined. He presents the first detailed map of our transitory time passing through a timeless realm, a realm that all the great physicists of the past century, such as Einstein, spoke of and strove to understand. Giorbran builds a spectacular vision by extending the ideas of David Bohm and Stephen Hawking, creating a visual model of the space of all possible states (soaps). Gradually this image of all possibilities transforms into a God's eye perspective of the many-worlds predicted by quantum theory. The foundational idea, Giorbran's version of the two kinds of order originally proposed by Bohm, is brilliant cutting edge science that clearly establishes a welcome redefinition of the previously bleak second law of thermodynamics. Ultimately this bold and fascinating study of cosmic structure sensibly reveals that we exist trapped between two great powers, one in our past, the other in our future, and our complex world results as each force tries to create its own kind of order in the universe. An exciting journey with a surprise ending written for the "what is true-reality?" seeker in us all.
One of the most mind blowing books I have ever read. It is well researched and thoroughly well written. Many theories are explained as well as many ideas. It is a book that is relatively unknown. Do not let it's unrecognized status deter you from reading. Concepts spoken about are mentally stimulating and serve as great inspiration for anyone interested in the subject of Time and/or the Universe. It comes replete with great quotes, diagrams, and pictures. The sheer amount of work that went into the book is evident. I highly recommend this book to everyone.
Literally, this is a book I could NOT PUT DOWN! It is one of the best books I have recently read.
I was researching an incident that happened in history concerning the passage and dimensions of time when author Giorbran's book appeared on my search engine. I bought it and couldn't wait for it to arrive. I began to read it as soon as it was unwrapped. Girobran's book was informative and well written. I must admit I have placed notes on most pages, underlined, and highlighted extensively. Giorbran tackles topics I had not previously seen addressed. We learn why our universe is this way. His new "Set Of All Possible States" (SOAPS) model will be discussed in numerous physics conversations. I particularly appreciate how he brought quantum physics into the discussions. Giorbran mentioned almost every type of situation in the passage of time that you could imagine. My mind is buzzing with new possibilities. He inserts many budding ideas and quotes of others. Referring the the laws of nature, he wrote: "The problem is that, in limiting our imagination strictly to what is possible according to such laws, we are unwittingly cutting ourselves off from ever understanding those laws. We are thinking only from inside the box when we need to also see what's outside of the box (non-local) in order to understand the limits inside the box." This book is highly recommended for readers in the fields of philosophy, astronomy, physics, mathematics, and Christian scholars as he proves the existence of God.
Interesting theories, even if pseudo-science (which is fine). His theories could have been greatly condensed though to a much shorter book. My favorite parts were all the quotes between chapters. Still, the idea that entropy is not what we think it is, and that we're really moving toward a greater (or maybe different) order - Grouping to symmetry - interesting. All the more interesting and sadder, as the author took his own life with no letter, explanation, etc.
Not really a review as I haven't read it but planning on reading it. However, I have some reservations as I cannot find any thing that would make Gevin Giorbran a credible candidate for the topic of discussion: no wiki entry; no references by other physicist, no scientific journal publication. Absolutely nothing. Anyone care to comment?
Actually, I've only read some of this book. I was disappointed to find out that this person isn't even a scholar; this book is just about some guy's intuitions of how the universe works. It's laced with some preliminary scientific knowledge, but I found a number of glaring errors just in the first few pages.