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Kitty Ferguson

    December 16, 1941

    Kitty Ferguson is an independent scholar and lecturer whose lifelong fascination with science, informed by a former career as a professional musician, shapes her literary output. Her work delves into complex scientific concepts, exploring their profound connections to the human experience with a keen and accessible style. Ferguson aims to illuminate the wonders of scientific discovery for a broad audience, revealing the inherent beauty and awe within the pursuit of knowledge.

    Kitty Ferguson
    Stephen Hawking Quest for a Theory of Everything
    Prisons of Light
    The nobleman and his housedog
    Stephen Hawking
    The Fire in the Equations
    Tycho & Kepler
    • 2019

      Stephen Hawking

      • 688 pages
      • 25 hours of reading
      4.1(18)Add rating

      In 1963 Stephen Hawking was given two years to live. Defying all the odds, he died in March 2018 at age seventy-six as the most celebrated scientist in the world. This carefully researched, and now newly updated, up-to-the-minute biography and tribute gives a rich picture of Hawking's remarkable life – his childhood, the heart-rending beginning of his struggle with motor neurone disease, his ever-increasing international fame, and his long personal battle for survival in pursuit of a scientific understanding of the universe. From more recent years, Kitty Ferguson describes his inspiring leadership at the London Paralympic Games, the release of the film The Theory of Everything, his continuing work on black holes and the origin of the universe, the discovery of ‘supertranslations’, and the astounding ‘Starshot’ program. Here also are his intense concern for the future of the Earth and his use of his celebrity to fight for environmental and humanitarian causes, and, finally, a ground-breaking paper he was working on at the time of his death, in which he took issue with some of his own earlier theories.

      Stephen Hawking
    • 2017

      Lost Science

      • 342 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      Acclaimed popular-science writer Kitty Ferguson investigates little-explored by-roads in the history of science, from Johannes Kepler's nearly disastrous venture into the realm of science fiction to a mid-20th-century experiment involving cats and rocket fuel.

      Lost Science
    • 2011

      Einstein said that the most incredible thing about our universe was that it was comprehensible at all. This title explains, Pythagoras had much the same idea - but 2,500 years earlier. It tells the story of Pythagoras and the Pythagoreans, whose insights transformed the ancient world.

      Pythagoras
    • 2011

      In 1963 Stephen Hawking was given a couple of years to live. In January 2017 he celebrates his seventy-fifth birthday. This biography of the brilliant theoretical physicist and inspirational international celebrity, written with the help of Hawking himself and his close associates, now includes- A His leadership at the London Paralympic Games A The release of the film about his life The Theory of Everything A His BBC Reith Lectures in 2016 A His continuing work on black holes, gravitational waves, the new discovery of osupertranslationso A The launch of the astounding oStarshoto programme A The first presentation of the Stephen Hawking Medal for Science Communication at Starmus III in June 2016. Written with the clarity and simplicity for which all Kitty Ferguson's books have been praised, it is a captivating account of an extraordinary life and mind.

      Stephen Hawking : his life and work. The story and science of one of the most extraordinary, celebrated and courageous figures of our time
    • 2002

      The nobleman and his housedog

      • 372 pages
      • 14 hours of reading

      Johannes Kepler was an obsessive, devout teacher of astronomy, and Tycho Brahe was a cruel, extravagant aristocrat who believed the sun orbited the Earth. Kepler's analytical abilities were said to be second to none, while Brahe was one of the best observational astronomers of all time. Their meeting in Prague in 1600 led to an extraordinary, if uneasy, alliance which eventually resulted in a huge leap forward in the understanding of astronomy. Together they produced the first three laws of planetary motion. This book tells the story of a major watershed in the history of human thought.

      The nobleman and his housedog
    • 2002

      Tycho & Kepler

      • 416 pages
      • 15 hours of reading
      4.4(26)Add rating

      Describes the scientific partnership between sixteenth-century astronomer Tycho Brahe and his colleague and student, mathematician Johannes Kepler, and the influence of Tycho's naked-eye observations of planetary movements on Kepler's Three Laws of Planetary Motion, the cornerstone of cosmology.

      Tycho & Kepler
    • 1999

      This informative text tells the story of how man has attempted to measure distance in space, ranging from early experiments in working out the circumference of the earth, through estimates of distance to the nearest stars, to developments in theories as to what is beyond the observable universe.

      Measuring the Universe
    • 1998

      Prisons of Light

      Black Holes

      • 228 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      Exploring the captivating topic of black holes, this book offers an accessible review of their discovery and significance in understanding the universe's mysteries. Kitty Ferguson employs clear language and relatable analogies, making complex concepts comprehensible for both scientists and non-scientists. Enhanced by 39 line diagrams and 25 photos, the work stands out for its engaging approach to a subject often deemed challenging.

      Prisons of Light
    • 1995

      Since the publication of Darwin's Origin of Species' in 1859, many have found science and belief in God irreconcible. Now, in the late 20th century, advances in physics, biology and the fields of chaos and complexity have brought the conflict to a crucial stage. Science attempts to discover the fundamental laws which underlie the beginning of the universe and its continuing evolution.

      The Fire in the Equations
    • 1988

      This Is The Story Of One Of The Most Remarkable Figures Of Our Time - Professor Stephen Hawking, The Cambridge Genius Who Has Earned An International Reputation As The Most Brilliant Theoretical Physicist Since Einstein. When Kitty Ferguson Approached Stephen Hawking With The Idea Of Writing A Book About Him And Asked Him To Help Her Make Certain She Understood His Theories, He Agreed To Do So And Also Supplied Her With Material About His Childhood And Life. This Book Is The Splendid Result. It Is Not A Biography Per Se. It Is Rather The Story Of One Man'S Quest To Find The 'Theory Of Everything'. In These Pages You Will Encounter A Multitude Of Amazing Paradoxes: Beginnings May Be Endings& Two Great Scientific Theories Taken Together Seem To Give Us Nonsense& Empty Space Isn'T Empty& Black Holes Aren'T Black& Cruel Circumstances Can Lead To Happiness, Although Fame And Success May Not& And A Man Whose Appearance Inspires Shock And Pity Takes Us Laughing To Where The Boundaries Of Space And Time Ought To Be - But Are Not.

      Stephen Hawking Quest for a Theory of Everything