Physics for the Rest of Us: Ten Basic Ideas of Twentieth-Century Physics That Everyone Should Know...and How They Have Shaped Our Culture and Consciousness
There is practically no area of contemporary life that has not been transformed by the breathtaking insights and everyday applications of twentieth-century physics, from many of the technologies we take for granted to our deepest beliefs about the universe. Now in paperback, Physics for the Rest of Us brings to life for the curious nonphysicist reader ten key ideas of modern physics and explores their far-reaching influence on our lives and thought.
As author Roger Jones explains major concepts—such as Einstein's special and general theories of relativity, quantum theory, and the structure of the atomic nucleus—he also traces the profound ways in which these ideas have affected our spiritual, psychological, ethical, and aesthetic realms. With lively intelligence Jones addresses such questions as: What light does science shed on the meaning of human existence? Are scientific theories independent of the men and women who conceive them? Are religion and science related or ultimately in conflict?
The title is a bit misleading, as this is basically a full-on modern Physics course, without the math. I'd still highly recommend it to anyone interested in the subject; just know that it is not the lightest reading you've done. :-) I aced the core Physics track at WPI with ease based in large part by the theoretical foundation acquired reading this book (and, of course, all the math I took beforehand).
Finished this book the day before I begin my "Physics Education" this fall semester. Wanted a summer read that felt intellectually stimulating and this surely was it.
Really enjoyed the prose and organization of the chapters, each had a clear topic to develop. It felt like I had a personal tutor with excellent knowledge of a great subject.
Physics is a human conception, and this book widened my eyes to the scientific idolatry that is tantamount to religious dogma in today's society. What we believe is an extension of the inculcated laws of "what is". This was also my introduction to relativity and curved space-time.
If anything, this book enriched my idea that everything is energy.
To sum the premise of what I learned: "Science plays a central role in the human desire and need to rationalize and make sense of existence" (319).