We all know that time is the template with which we define our lives. We also know it is on our side, is up, and flies, especially when we're having fun. There are bath time and bedtime, good times and bad, an entire biblical catalogue from the book of Ecclesiastes. But what is it? Where did time come from and where does it go? The answer is as slippery as silverfish; it has eluded history's most magnificent minds.
Early Christian church father and philosopher St. Augustine of Hippo wrote:
""What, then, is time? If no one asks me, I know. If I wish to explain it to one that asketh, I know not. My soul is on fire to know this most intricate enigma.""
In his newest book, "The Mystery of Time," award-winning author John Langone invites the reader into the inquiry. We see our earliest ancestors observe the movement of herds, the shifting sky, and the cycles of budding and bloom. We marvel in the dark at Stonehenge and at a path of solstice sun inching over a Native American calendar glyph. We stand next to the magnificent water clock of the Chinese inventor Su Sung, and we rock on the deck of an English ship to check on the first shipboard clock reliable enough for determining accurate longitude. We search for clues to what governs our circadian rhythms and contemplate the backward flow of subatomic time.
From the imaginative designs of Galileo to the soaring discoveries of Einstein, we go on to the latest debates and into the farthest reaches of modern thought on the nature of time. Along the way, me meet Julius Caesar, Ptolemy, Newton, and Stephen Hawking -- plus dozens of others whose study and struggle, feuding and folly, have played a part in the story.
Withmore than 200 colorful and instructive illustrations and fact boxes, in language that is lively and accessible, "The Mystery of Time" traces the story of humanity's struggle to come to terms with the concept of time: to measure it, to use it, to standardize it, to beat it, and finally to understand it.
God has fit time into the continuum of eternity in such a way that it governs the human experience. In this, his seventh book, author Donnell Duncan looks from seven different Biblical perspectives at the age-old question; "What is time?
The Mystery of Time: Travelling through Time and Space
This fascinating work begins with a scientific appraisal of time and its relationship with 3D space.
In lyric, accessible prose, Carlo Rovelli invites us to consider questions about the nature of time that continue to puzzle physicists and philosophers alike. For most readers this is unfamiliar terrain.
This book takes readers on a tour of the eerie and unexplained - from the search for vanished civilizations to the science of real-life zombies, from famous UFO sightings to encounters with ghosts and otherworldly creatures, and much more.
Bruce and Stan can help them understand Revelation's encouraging message and apply it to their lives today. This handy guide is thorough enough to uncover Revelation's treasures but succinct enough to be fast-paced and easy to read.
Time Warped shows us how to manage our time more efficiently, speed time up and slow it down at will, plan for the future with more accuracy, and, ultimately, use the warping of time to our own advantage.
From the author that brought you NEW YORK TIMES best selling books The Harbinger, The Mystery of the Shemitah, and The Paradigm selling over 3 MILLION copies Imagine if you discovered a treasure chest in which were hidden ancient mysteries, ...
The Mystery of Time: Asymmetry of Time and Irreversibility in the Natural Processes
An in-depth study of biblical Hebrew and numerics in the Bible that reveals a more realistic and contextual scenario of Revelation 13 which uncovers that Islam is the final beast empire before Yeshua returns.