The story of the most radical idea to have been proposed in physics since Einstein's relativity - the suggestion that the speed of light may not be constant - by the scientist who first proposed it. 20030513
Born in Portugal and educated at the universities of Lisbon and Cambridge, Joao Magueijo (pronounced 'zhwow magwayzhoo) is Reader in Theoretical Physics at Imperial College, London, where he was for three years a Royal Society Research Fellow. He has been a visiting researcher at the University of California at Berkeley and Princeton University, and received his doctorate in Theoretical Physics at Cambridge. Faster than the Speed of Light is his first book.
Magueijo tells the story...with passion and considerable verve,
familiarising his readers with some of the hippiest ideas in modern
science.
*The Observer*
For its lucidity and persuasiveness, Joao Magueijo's book on
cosmological thinking stands comparison with Simon Singh's Fermat's
Last Theorem- a hip, raucous, hot-blooded, bilious and altogether
bewitching expose of real science from the inside.
*Daily Telegraph*
A highly readable account of the problems besetting modern
cosmology and how they appear to be resolved by [his theory].
Better still, he gives an honest and revealing insight into what
it's like to carry out scientific research
*Guardian*
Like many of the best popular science books, this is not so much a
definitive statement as a thrilling report from the front. There
hasn't been a writer about science this bolshy since the young
James Watson- Fascinating
*Time Out*
Could Einstein be wrong and Magueijo right? Equally pressing for Magueijo, a lecturer in theoretical physics at London's Imperial College, is whether the physics editor at the preeminent science journal Nature is in fact "a first class moron" for rejecting his last paper. And did that cosmologist from Princeton steal his idea? What about all those hours wasted writing requests for funding from those "parasites," those "ex-scientists well past their prime" who dispense the monies that make contemporary science possible? Welcome to the world of career science, disclosed here in all its flawed brilliance. Magueijo's heretical idea-that the speed of light is not constant; light traveled faster in the early universe-challenges the most fundamental tenet of modern physics. Deceptively simple, the theory came to the author during a bad hangover one damp morning in Cambridge, England (many of the author's breakthroughs seem to arrive at unexpected moments, like while he's urinating outside a Goan bar). If true, Magueijo's Variant Speed of Light theory, or VSL, rectifies apparent inconsistencies in the Big Bang theory. Magueijo cunningly frames his journey with the stories of other famous, courageous heretics, notably Einstein himself, and one suspects an apologetics at work here. Magueijo, a 35-year-old native of Portugal, is opinionated and can seem immature and almost bratty in his diatribes against the banalities of academia or the hypocrisy and backbiting of peer review. But his science is lucidly rendered, and even his penchant for sturm und drang sheds light on the tensions felt by scientists incubating new ideas. This book shows how science is done-and so easily can be undone. (Feb.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
Magueijo tells the story...with passion and considerable verve,
familiarising his readers with some of the hippiest ideas in modern
science. * The Observer *
For its lucidity and persuasiveness, Joao Magueijo's book on
cosmological thinking stands comparison with Simon Singh's Fermat's
Last Theorem- a hip, raucous, hot-blooded, bilious and
altogether bewitching expose of real science from the inside. *
Daily Telegraph *
A highly readable account of the problems besetting modern
cosmology and how they appear to be resolved by [his theory].
Better still, he gives an honest and revealing insight into what
it's like to carry out scientific research * Guardian *
Like many of the best popular science books, this is not so much a
definitive statement as a thrilling report from the front. There
hasn't been a writer about science this bolshy since the young
James Watson- Fascinating * Time Out *
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