"This is also a book about God … or perhaps about the absence of God," Carl Sagan wrote in the foreword.Specifically, Professor Hawking was attempting to answer the famous question posed by Einstein: how much choice did God have in constructing the universe?
"We were just trying to create a book that was scientifically accurate without being impenetrable to the general reader, someone like me," he wrote in The Guardian.However, if the book is still too difficult for you, don't feel like you're the only one.
"Of every 100 people who bought A Brief History of Time, three finished it," wrote Time's book critic Paul Gray in 2001.He was basing that approximation on a formula called the Fully Read Index, which measures how easy a book is to read and how dumb the author makes readers feel.
"According to the theory of relativity, nothing can travel faster than light. Thus if light cannot escape, neither can anything else; everything is dragged back by the gravitational field. So one has a set of events, a region of space-time, from which it is not possible to escape to reach a distant observer.Anything or anyone who fell past the event horizon, Professor Hawking explained, would soon reach a point of "infinite density and the end of time" — bad news for hypothetical astronauts.
"This region is what we now call a black hole. Its boundary is called the event horizon."
"The present evidence … suggests that the universe will probably expand forever, but all we can really be sure of is that even if the universe is going to recollapse, it won't do so for at least another 10,000 million years, since it has already been expanding for at least that long.
"This should not unduly worry us: by that time, unless we have colonised beyond the solar system, mankind will long since have died out, extinguished along with our Sun!"
"We do not yet have such a theory, and we may still be a long way from having one, but we do already know many of the properties that it must have," Professor Hawking wrote.However, at the end of his book, Professor Hawking said:
"Even if there is only one possible unified theory, it is just a set of rules and equations."He put forward some of the questions that might remain:
"What is it that breathes fire into the equations and makes a universe for them to describe? The usual approach of science of constructing a mathematical model cannot answer the questions of why there should be a universe for the model to describe.So, don't expect to know everything after reading A Brief History Of Time.
Why does the universe go to all the bother of existing? Is the unified theory so compelling that it brings about its own existence? Or does it need a creator, and, if so, does he have any other effect on the universe? And who created him?"
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