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  • Published: 5 November 2020
  • ISBN: 9781473548862
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 400

The Janus Point

A New Theory of Time




A ground-breaking challenge to our understanding of the universe and a brilliant solution with radical implications for our understanding of the nature of time itself.

What is time? The Janus Point offers a ground-breaking solution to one of the greatest mysteries in physics.

For over a century, the greatest minds have sought to understand why time seems to flow in one direction, ever forward. In The Janus Point, Julian Barbour offers a radically new answer: it doesn't.

At the heart of this book, Barbour provides a new vision of the Big Bang - the Janus Point - from which time flows in two directions, its currents driven by the expansion of the universe and the growth of order in the galaxies, planets and life itself. What emerges is not just a revolutionary new theory of time, but a hopeful argument about the destiny of our universe.

'Both a work of literature and a masterpiece of scientific thought' Lee Smolin, author of The Trouble with Physics

'Profound...original...accessible to anyone who has pondered the mysteries of space and time' Martin Rees, Astronomer Royal

'Takes on fundamental questions, offering a new perspective on how the Universe started and where it may be headed' Science Magazine

  • Published: 5 November 2020
  • ISBN: 9781473548862
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 400

About the author

Julian Barbour

Julian Barbour has been a Visiting Professor in Physics at the University of Oxford since 2008. He is the author of two books, The Discovery of Dynamics (Oxford University Press, 2000) and The End of Time (Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1999). He is featured on national radio and TV, including BBC documentaries, regularly. He has appeared along with Stephen Hawking and Roger Penrose in the widely acclaimed Reality on the Rocks on Channel 4 in the UK.

Praise for The Janus Point

The Janus Point shows history-in-the-making: a project to recast the foundations of all of cosmology, gravity, thermodynamics and the arrow of time. The book has given me a lot to ponder. As Gauss said of Riemann's habilitation lecture, '[it] exceeded my expectations'

Bill Unruh, Professor of Physics at University of British Columbia

Julian Barbour is a profound and original thinker with the boldness to tackle some of nature's deepest problems. He is also a fine writer, and this renders his book - despite its conceptual depth - accessible to anyone who has pondered the mysteries of space and time

Martin Rees, Astronomer Royal and former President of the Royal Society

With a rare humanity and a perspective based on a lifetime of study, Barbour writes a book that is both a work of literature and a masterpiece of scientific thought

Lee Smolin, author of The Trouble with Physics

The origin of the arrow of time is arguably the most important conceptual problem in cosmology, and the prospect that it can be solved in a universe where time flows "backward" in the far past is as exciting as it is provocative. In this engaging book, Julian Barbour conveys this excitement admirably

Sean Carroll, author of From Eternity to Here

Julian Barbour has no peer when it comes to explaining scientific ideas in a way that is accessible without being simplistic

Neal Stephenson, author of Snow Crash

Julian Barbour has discovered an unexpected and remarkably simple feature of Newtonian dynamics that is the basis of his seductive and eloquently presented explanation of the history of the universe, even time itself

Michael Victor Berry, Professor of Physics (Emeritus) at Bristol University

This delightful, provocative book is a cosmic physics adventure, enlivened with history and poetry

Theodore A. Jacobson, Professor of Physics at University of Maryland

Julian Barbour has a complete mastery of the history of ideas yet a remarkable lightness and clarity in explaining what are profound concepts. The Janus Point is controversial and gripping, an extraordinary introduction to his view of the universe

Pedro G. Ferreira, author of The Perfect Theory

Barbour takes on fundamental questions, offering a new perspective - illustrated with lucid examples and poetically constructed prose - on how the Universe started (or more precisely, how it did not start) and where it may be headed. This book is an engaging read, which both taught me something new about meat-and-potatoes physics and reminded me why asking fundamental questions can be so fun

Matthew Johnson, Science

Julian Barbour is one that rare breed, an optimistic scientist, and his engrossing The Janus Point not only turns accepted thinking about the universe on its head...but also suggests our very understanding of the nature of time needs to be reappraised

Choice

A closely argued, substantive take on one of the biggest unsolved mysteries of physics, written by someone who has wrestled with not only the physics, but also the history and philosophy relevant to his subject. What's more, Barbour's approach, unlike many in the popular science game, is to publish only when he thinks he has something worth saying. That alone is enough to make him worth listening to

Michael Brooks, Nautilus

Any reader willing to engage with Barbour's ideas will come away enlightened

Sidney Perkowitz, Physics World