Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Seeing and Believing

How the Telescope Opened Our Eyes and Minds to the Heavens

Parameters

  • 198 pages
  • 7 hours of reading

More about the book

"Seeing and Believing" tells the story, visionary by visionary and discovery by discovery, of the telescope, one of the few inventions that have revolutionized our view of the universe and how we fit into it. In the tradition of Dava Sobel's "Longitude," "Seeing and Believing" focuses on the often larger-than-life figures whose insights and breakthroughs made our cosmological odyssey possible - from Galileo himself to William Herschel, the musician-turned-astronomer who discovered Uranus, to George Ellery Hale, who regularly conversed with an elf yet managed nonetheless to found both the Mount Wilson and Mount Palomar observatories. But the most fascinating character of all is the telescope itself, which, designed solely to help us determine our place in the scheme of things, is an evolving metaphor for how we see ourselves.

Book purchase

Seeing and Believing, Richard Panek

Language
Released
1998
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Hardcover),
Book condition
Good
Price
€2.79

Payment methods

No one has rated yet.Add rating

Title
Seeing and Believing
Subtitle
How the Telescope Opened Our Eyes and Minds to the Heavens
Language
English
Publisher
Viking Pr
Released
1998
Format
Hardcover
Pages
198
ISBN10
0670876283
ISBN13
9780670876280
Series
Description
"Seeing and Believing" tells the story, visionary by visionary and discovery by discovery, of the telescope, one of the few inventions that have revolutionized our view of the universe and how we fit into it. In the tradition of Dava Sobel's "Longitude," "Seeing and Believing" focuses on the often larger-than-life figures whose insights and breakthroughs made our cosmological odyssey possible - from Galileo himself to William Herschel, the musician-turned-astronomer who discovered Uranus, to George Ellery Hale, who regularly conversed with an elf yet managed nonetheless to found both the Mount Wilson and Mount Palomar observatories. But the most fascinating character of all is the telescope itself, which, designed solely to help us determine our place in the scheme of things, is an evolving metaphor for how we see ourselves.