The Living Universe is a comprehensive, historically nuanced study of the formation of the new scientific discipline of exobiology and its transformation into astrobiology.
This is a world-view that, as Elgin explains, is shared by virtually every spiritual tradition, and the implications of it are vast and deep.
Gods and Men in Virgil's Aeneid Agathe Thornton ... The philosophy to which he longed to devote himself after finishing the Aeneid would not have been the atomism of Epicurus but the philosophy which is inherent in the Aeneid itself ...
In this thought experiment, a group of people are traveling through the deep space between the stars in the Starship Titanic. ... They maneuvered their spaceship to a stationary point above the planet's equator (geosynchronous orbit).
This is a world-view that, as Elgin explains, is shared by virtually every spiritual tradition, and the implications of it are vast and deep.
This book is the first to include oral history interviews with most of the primary participants from 1953 to the present.
This book represents a discussion and interrogatory concerning the Creator and Its creations including the Human race.
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it.