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E=mc2

A Biography of the World's Most Famous Equation

By David Bodanis

(9)

| Paperback | 9780425181645

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Book Description

Already climbing the bestseller lists-and garnering rave reviews-this "little masterpiece"* sheds brilliant light on the equation that changed the world.

"This is not a physics book. It is a history of where the equation [E=mc2] came from and how it has changed the world. After a short chaptContinue

Already climbing the bestseller lists-and garnering rave reviews-this "little masterpiece"* sheds brilliant light on the equation that changed the world.

"This is not a physics book. It is a history of where the equation [E=mc2] came from and how it has changed the world. After a short chapter on the equation's birth, Bodanis presents its five symbolic ancestors in sequence, each with its own chapter and each with rich human stories of achievement and failure, encouragement and duplicity, love and rivalry, politics and revenge. Readers meet not only famous scientists at their best and worst but also such famous and infamous characters as Voltaire and Marat...Bodanis includes detailed, lively and fascinating back matter...His acknowledgements end, 'I loved writing this book.' It shows." (The Cleveland Plain Dealer)

"E=mc2, focusing on the 1905 theory of special relativity, is just what its subtitle says it is: a biography of the world's most famous equation, and it succeeds beautifully. For the first time, I really feel that I understand the meaning and implications of that equation, as Bodanis takes us through each symbol separately, including the = sign...there is a great 'aha!' awaiting the lay reader." (St. Louis Post-Dispatch)

"'The equation that changed everything' is familiar to even the most physics-challenged, but it remains a fuzzy abstraction to most. Science writer Bodanis makes it a lot more clear." (Discover)

"Excellent...With wit and style, he explains every factor in the world's most famous and least understood equation....Every page is rich with surprising anecdotes about everything from Einstein's youth to the behind-the-scenes workings of the Roosevelt administration. Here's a prediction: E=mc2 is one of those odd, original, and handsomely written books that will prove more popular than even its publisher suspects." (Nashville Scene)

"You'll learn more in these 300 pages about folks like Faraday, Lavoisier, Davy and Rutherford than you will in many a science course...a clearly written, astonishingly understandable book that celebrates human achievement and provides some idea of the underlying scientific orderliness and logic that guides the stars and rules the universe." (Parade )

"Bodanis truly has a gift for bringing his subject matter to life." (Library Journal [starred review] )

"Entertaining...With anecdotes and illustrations, Bodanis effectively opens up E=mc2 to the widest audience." (Booklist )

"Accessible...he seeks, and deserves, many readers who know no physics. They'll learn a handful-more important, they'll enjoy it, and pick up a load of biographical and cultural curios along the way." (Publishers Weekly)

Critics

  • E=mc2: A Biography of the World's Most Famous Equation By David Bodanis

    he subtitle of E=mc2: A Biography of the World's Most Famous Equation is an immediate clue that this book is not physics as you studied it in high school or college. David Bodanis, a lecturer at Oxford University, takes what could have been a dull re ... (read full critics)

    bookpage published on Sat, 18 Sep 2010

  • More pap than pop

    In 1905 Einstein published four papers that fundamentally changed the course of science and the way we understand the universe. He was 26 at the time, stuck in a dreary job at a Swiss patent office. One of those papers contained the equation E=mc2 (i ... (read full critics)

    spectator published on Fri, 17 Sep 2010

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Book Details

  • Rating:
    (9)
    • 5 stars
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    • 2 stars
    • 1 star
  • English Books
  • Paperback 352 Pages
  • Edition: 1st
  • ISBN-10: 0425181642
  • ISBN-13: 9780425181645
  • Publisher: Berkley Trade
  • Pub date: Oct 09, 2001
  • Dimensions: 1355 mm x 774 mm x 129 mm Just how big is that?
  • Also available as: Hardcover, Audio Cassette, Others and eBook
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9780425181645 Paperback $16.00 $11.52 bn.com
$16.00 $10.49 The Book Depository
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