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Summary
Summary
Instant New York Times Best-seller
From the world-renowned physicist and best-selling author of The Elegant Universe comes a captivating exploration of deep time and humanity's search for purpose.
"Few humans share Greene's mastery of both the latest cosmological science and English prose."
-- The New York Times (notable book of 2020)
Until the End of Time is Brian Greene's breathtaking new exploration of the cosmos and our quest to find meaning in the face of this vast expanse. Greene takes us on a journey from the big bang to the end of time, exploring how lasting structures formed, how life and mind emerged, and how we grapple with our existence through narrative, myth, religion, creative expression, science, the quest for truth, and a deep longing for the eternal. From particles to planets, consciousness to creativity, matter to meaning--Brian Greene allows us all to grasp and appreciate our fleeting but utterly exquisite moment in the cosmos.
Reviews (6)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Greene (The Hidden Reality), director of Columbia University's Center for Theoretical Physics, translates sophisticated science topics into an accessible and illuminating survey. His achievement is particularly remarkable given the cerebral subject--the "fundamental transience of everything" in the universe, and of the universe itself. Greene digests the latest scientific thinking on how the universe began; on molecular Darwinism, the "chemical combat" believed to have triggered the transformation of inanimate collections of atoms into life; and on the nature of consciousness. Greene effectively illustrates his points with understandable examples, as when he uses pennies, all arranged heads-up, to explain entropy; shaking the coins will flip some of the coins to tails, thus increasing disorder, but is highly unlikely to return them all to the ordered state of all-heads. He concedes that some profound questions--"Why is there something rather than nothing?"--are currently unanswerable, though he is convinced that "there is no grand design," and that people must construct their own meaning. Curious readers interested in some of the most fundamental questions of existence, and willing to invest some time and thought, will be richly rewarded by his fascinating exploration. (Feb.)
Booklist Review
Why does the universe exist? How will it end? What does it all mean? Greene (The Fabric of the Cosmos, 2004), a leading cosmic thinker and popular science writer, attempts to tackle these questions with an eye to explaining our deep need to believe we can be part of something eternal that is focused on the central role of entropy and Darwinian evolution in the unfolding of the universe. He begins with the Big Bang and concludes with explorations of how the universe might end. He explores the development of planets and complex life, the birth of mind, language, and creativity, awareness of mortality, the rise of storytelling, religion, and our attempts to leave some kind of permanent testament to our existence. He serves broad, high level summaries of ideas from physics, biology, neuroscience, philosophy, the arts, storytelling, and anthropology. He provides enough background to follow the meat of the discussion but he doesn't water it down for nonspecialists. There's tremendous joy in witnessing a brilliant and curious mind wrestle with such profound issues. He takes readers on a remarkable journey.--John Keogh Copyright 2020 Booklist
Choice Review
This is a long, fascinating, and complex book. Greene (Columbia Univ.) begins his story about the universe-- its past, its future, and its inhabitants--at the big bang and ends it in the far distant future. Three basic concepts provide common threads that inform both Greene's interpretation of the facts and his personal views. Entropy (disorder) helps to explain the direction of time. Evolution helps to explain the development of richness and complexity. Reductionism helps us to understand consciousness, free will, and meaning in the universe. Greene's extended discussion of the connection between the subjective mind and brain function is especially insightful and thought provoking. His writing is engaging, colorful, and often waxes poetic. His ability to convey his views and then to contrast them with sympathetic approaches different from his own is impressive. The final sections, dealing with conjectures and speculations with regard to the presumed "end of time," effectively illustrate how humanity and thought are both improbable accidents of the current universe as tuned, in certain places, for supporting life. In sum, Greene's text brings a wide-ranging scholarship to bear in examining notably diverse fields, and he ties them together for readers in a seamless and coherent way. This book belongs in everyone's library. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readers. --Kenneth L. Schick, emeritus, Union College (NY)
Guardian Review
"In the fullness of time all that lives will die." With this bleak truth Brian Greene, a physicist and mathematician at Columbia University, the author of best-selling books like "The Elegant Universe" and co-founder of the yearly New York celebration of science and art known as the World Science Festival, sets off in "Until the End of Time" on the ultimate journey, a meditation on how we go on doing what we do, why and how it will end badly, and why it matters anyway. For going on is what we do, building bridges, spaceships and families, composing great symphonies and other works of art, directing movies, and waging wars and presidential campaigns, even though not only are we going to die, but so is all life everywhere in the fullness of eternity, according to what science now thinks it knows about us and the universe. "Until the End of Time" is encyclopedic in its ambition and its erudition, often heartbreaking, stuffed with too many profundities that I wanted to quote, as well as potted descriptions of the theories of a galaxy of contemporary thinkers, from Chomsky to Hawking, and anecdotes from Greene's own life - of which we should wish for more - that had me laughing. It is also occasionally afflicted with stretches of prose that seem as if eternity will come before you ever get through them, especially when Greene is discussing challenging topics like entropy. If I really understood entropy, I suspect I would be writing this review in an office at M.I.T., not an apartment on Manhattan's Upper West Side. Greene's main idea, his own grand unified theory of human endeavor, expanding on the thoughts of people like Otto Rank, Jean-Paul Sartre and Oswald Spengler, is that we want to transcend death by attaching ourselves to something permanent that will outlast us: art, science, our families and so forth. For Greene this impulse has taken the form of a lifetime devotion to mathematics and physics, of the search for laws and truths that transcend time and place. "The enchantment of a mathematical proof might be that it stands forever," he writes. If he dies, the work lives on as part of the body of science and knowledge. But as a cosmologist, he knows this is an illusion: "As our trek across time will make clear, life is likely transient, and all understanding that arose with its emergence will almost certainly dissolve with its conclusion. Nothing is permanent. Nothing is absolute." Depressing. But in a Starbucks one day, he says, he had a realization, a sort of conversion to gratitude. Life and thought might occupy only a minute oasis in cosmic time, but, he writes, "If you take that in fully, envisioning a future bereft of stars and planets and things that think, your regard for our era can appreciate toward reverence." Or maybe, he jokes, he was just losing his mind. This book, then, is a love letter to the ephemeral cosmic moment when everything is possible. Reading it is like riding an escalator up through a giant department store. On the lower floors you find things like time, energy, gravity and the Big Bang, and biology. The universe is expanding - why? So far the best explanation is that a virulent antigravitational force dubbed "inflation" - and strangely allowed by Einstein's equations - briefly switched on during the first split trillionth of a second of time and sent everything flying, but astronomers still lack the smoking-gun proof. All living creatures that we know about on Earth share the same genetic tool kit, based on DNA. And we are all battery-operated, deriving energy from a molecule called adenosine triphosphate, ATP for short. In order to keep going, Greene tells us, each cell in your body consumes some 10 million of these molecules every second. Upward we go through the emporium of ideas to floors dedicated to consciousness, free will, language and religion. We don't linger long on any floor. Greene is like one of those custom shopping consultants. He knows the wares, the ideas being pitched in every department. He drags in all the experts - from Proust to Hawking - and tries to be an honest broker about the answers to questions we can't really answer. Why do humans tell stories? Was there an evolutionary advantage to be gained from taking time out from the hunt to sit around the campfire and gab - a bonding experience? Is the shared imagination a way to practice navigating unknown territory, or a guide for living your life? Can physics explain not just how the mind - neurons and electrochemical impulses - works but also explain the feeling of having a mind, that is to say consciousness? Greene is cautiously hopeful it can. "That the mind can do all it does is extraordinary. That the mind may accomplish all it does with nothing more than the kinds of ingredients and types of forces holding together my coffee cup, makes it more extraordinary still. Consciousness would be demystified without being diminished." But he's not always sure. Admitting that the neurophysical facts shed only "a monochrome light" on human experience, he extols art as another dimension. "We gain access to worlds otherwise uncharted," he says. "As Proust emphasized, this is to be celebrated. Only through art, he noted, can we enter the secret universe of another, the only journey in which we truly 'fly from star to star,' a journey that cannot be navigated by 'direct and conscious methods.'" Two main themes run through this story. The first is natural selection, the endless inventive process of evolution that keeps molding organisms into more and more complex arrangements and codependencies. The second is what Greene calls the "entropic-two step." This refers to the physical property known as entropy. In thermodynamics it denotes the amount of heat - wasted energy - inevitably produced by a steam engine, for example as it goes through its cycle of expansion and contraction. It's the reason you can't build a perpetual motion machine. In modern physics it's a measure of disorder and information. Entropy is a big concept in information theory and black holes, as well as in biology. We are all little steam engines, apparently, and everything we accomplish has a cost. That is why your exhaust pipe gets too hot to touch, or why your desk tends to get more cluttered by the end of the day. In the end, Greene says, entropy will get us all, and everything else in the universe, tearing down what evolution has built. "The entropic two-step and the evolutionary forces of selection enrich the pathway from order to disorder with prodigious structure, but whether stars or black holes, planets or people, molecules or atoms, things ultimately fall apart," he writes. In a virtuosic final section Greene describes how this will work by inviting us to climb an allegorical Empire State Building; on each floor the universe is 10 times older. If the first floor is Year 10, we now are just above the 10th (10 billion years). By the time we get to the 11th floor the sun will be gone and with it probably any life on Earth. As we climb higher we are exposed to expanses of time that make the current age of the universe look like less than the blink of an eye. Eventually the Milky Way galaxy will fall into a black hole. On about the 38th floor of the future, when the universe is 100 trillion trillion trillion years old, protons, the building blocks of atoms, will dissolve out from under us, leaving space populated by a thin haze of lightweight electrons and a spittle of radiation. In the far, far, far, far future, even holding a thought will require more energy than will be available in the vastly dissipated universe. It will be an empty and cold place that doesn't remember us. "Nabokov's description of a human life as a 'brief crack of light between two eternities of darkness' may apply to the phenomenon of life itself," Greene writes. In the end it is up to us to make of this what we will. We can contemplate eternity, Greene concludes, "and even though we can reach for eternity, apparently we cannot touch eternity."
Kirkus Review
The author of several bestselling explorations of cutting-edge physics turns his attention to the cosmos, and readers will encounter his usual astute observations and analysis.Greene (Physics and Mathematics/Columbia Univ.; The Hidden Reality: Parallel Universes and the Deep Laws of the Cosmos, 2016) quotes from philosopher Bertrand Russell who, in a 1948 radio debate with a cleric, based his agnosticism on a scientific law: "the universe has crawled by slow stages to a somewhat pitiful result on this earth and is going to crawl by still more pitiful stages to a condition of universal deathif this is to be taken as evidence of purpose, I can only say that the purpose is one that does not appeal to me." Russell is referring to the second law of thermodynamics, which states that "everything in the universe has an overwhelming tendency to run down, to degrade, to wither." Greene explains that this is entropy, a term that is often popularly defined as a gradual slide into disorder. In the Big Bang, a supremely ordered low entropy kernel of energy expanded into the familiar universe, but entropy's steady increase will lead to a uniformly disordered cold, lifeless emptinessalthough not for a long time. The law allows plenty of local, highly organized, low entropy areasgalaxies, stars, civilizationwhose existence is more than balanced by wasted energy they produce. Having announced his theme, Greene regularly returns to it in 11 chapters that begin at the Big Bang and proceed with deeply learned, sharp, never dumbed-down accounts of what scientists know about star formation, planet formation, life's origins, evolution, consciousness, language, culture, and religion. The author concludes his engaging survey with what the future might hold for humans (very long life) and the universe (even longer); beyond a certain entropy, however, there will be no room for us.An insightful history of everything that simplifies its complex subject as much as possible but no further. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Library Journal Review
Greene (physics and math, Columbia Univ.; The Elegant Universe) takes listeners from the beginning of the universe to the closest astrophysics can take us to the projected end of it all. He covers 14 billion years of the history of the universe, explains the physical laws that produced stars and galaxies, life and consciousness, and takes listeners far into the future when everything will decay and organized matter of any kind will not be possible. Greene dips into just about all the sciences to cover the big bang, the concept of time, how the origins of all matter are all doomed by entropy, how humans have managed to understand life and consciousness, the importance of language and the power of the human mind, the development of creativity, and the current cutting edge astrophysics understanding of quantum mechanics, ending with the sobering reality that nothing is permanent. VERDICT The author's personable, friendly narration provides a steady, balanced approach to this powerful adaptation of cutting-edge theoretical physics aimed at an erudite lay audience. The work will appeal to fans of David Christian's Origin Story, Walter Alvarez's A Most Improbable Journey, and Neil deGrasse Tyson's and Donald Goldsmith's Origins, as well as Carl Sagan's classic works.--Dale Farris, Groves, TX