Greene's New Book: Reviews & Worth Picking Up

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The discussion centers on opinions regarding Greene's new book, with participants sharing their thoughts on its readability and content compared to "The Elegant Universe." Many find the new book easier to read and appreciate its balance between accessibility and depth, allowing both casual readers and those familiar with the material to engage with it. Some note that it diverges significantly from "The Elegant Universe," focusing more on fundamental questions about time, space, and causality rather than explicating specific theories. While some readers feel it doesn't quite match the impact of Greene's earlier work, they still consider it a worthwhile read compared to other contemporary authors. The inclusion of contrasting opinions from other scientists in the end notes is also highlighted as a positive aspect.
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Has anyone started or finished greene's new book? What did you think? Is it worth picking up?
 
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Greene is able to achieve a wonderful state of equilibrium in his books, in my opinion; it's not excessively layman in that it leaves those familiar with the material without reverance, and it's casual enough that you can almost read it like many would a novel. It doesn't read like Feynman, but it doesn't read like Dan Brown either.

Of course, the above is my opinion of The Elegant Universe, so it's possible his new book abberrated from this preferred (by me) state of equilibrum.
 
I bave read about half of the book, and I think it is excellent. The book is easy to read, in fact I think that it is easier to read than The Elegant Universe.
 
I started reading "The Fabric of the Cosmos", but it seemed like a lot of re-iteration of that which was already explained in "The Elegant Universe", so I put it down. Krazie, when you finish it, tell us how well you like it, and maybe I'll pick it up again.
 
different than elegant universe

elegant universe was a lot better than this book he took very different path's in the next book and just didn't gel like the first. but still a good book much better than many other writers today.
 
I'm reading it now. It has a different purpose than "Elegant". Rather than explicating a given theory he is trying to show what science is saying and can say about the basic questions of time, space, causality, realism, and so on. He is very frank when he states his own opinion but gives you end notes with other scientists' contrasting opinions.
 
This thread only works as a summary from the original source: List of STEM Masterworks in Physics, Mechanics, Electrodynamics... The original thread got very long and somewhat hard to read so I have compiled the recommendations from that thread in an online (Google Drive) spreadsheet. SUMMARY Permits are granted so you can make comments on the spreadsheet but I'll initially be the only one capable of edition. This is to avoid the possibility of someone deleting everything either by mistake...
By looking around, it seems like Dr. Hassani's books are great for studying "mathematical methods for the physicist/engineer." One is for the beginner physicist [Mathematical Methods: For Students of Physics and Related Fields] and the other is [Mathematical Physics: A Modern Introduction to Its Foundations] for the advanced undergraduate / grad student. I'm a sophomore undergrad and I have taken up the standard calculus sequence (~3sems) and ODEs. I want to self study ahead in mathematics...

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