Thursday 25 January 2018

"The Upright Thinkers" by Leonard Mlodinow

Details: 

Full Title: The Upright Thinkers - The Human Journey from Living in Trees to Understanding the Cosmos. 

Completed on 24th of January 2018 

Rated: Three stars. 

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Review: 

Combination of science and cultural history. Describes how physics, chemistry and the natural sciences have been transformed from qualitative descriptions to quantitative scientific disciplines, and role of Newton, Mendeleev and Darwin. This is followed up by the description of developments in the quantum theory, and its major contributors. 

Notes: 

A Gobleki Tepe structure appears to be a religious sanctuary and suggests that the spiritual development preceded a settled lifestyle. It was located in the Urfa province in south-eastern Turkey. It was built 11,500 years ago - 7,000 years before the Great Pyramid. It predated the invention of writing. It is made up of circles of the T-shaped pillars up to 5.5 meters high and weighting up to 16 tons. There are various menacing animals carved on the pillars. No traces of human settlement around the structure have been found. Instead the bones of thousands of gazelles and aurochs have been found.

The first Neolithic village has been found in central Turkey around Catalhoyuk. It was built around 7500 BC., a few hundred kilometres west of Gobekli Tepe. It was a home to up to 8,000 people. They buried their dead under the floors of their homes. 

The first example of law dates back to 1750 BC and the Code of Hammurabi issued in Babylonian Empire. The rules were carved onto 2.25 m. high block of black basalt, and now in Louvre. 

City of Miletus is considered the vanguard of the Greek enlightenment. It population was up to 100,000. Among the scholars of Miletus, the first prominent was Thales (624 - 546 B.C.). He adopted Egyptian mathematics and was the first to prove geometric truths. He influenced Pythagoras (570-495 B.C.), who was born on the Greek island of Samos, not far from Miletus. He influenced Plato, who in turn thought Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) - a teacher of Alexander the Great. 

The author suggests that the Greek heritage was discontinued by the Romans, who conquered Greece in 146 B.C. After the dissolution of the Western Roman Empire in 476 A.D. Christianity dominated and scholarship became focused on religious issues. The medieval period lasted between 500 and 1500 A.D., and was dismissed in the nineteenth century as "a thousand years without a bath". 

The first clock to record hours of equal length was not invented until the 1330s. Before that, daylight, however long, had been divided into twelve equal intervals, regardless of the seasons. 

The author presents an interesting explanation of the inverse square gravity law between the two bodies. It was proposed by Halley, who tried to find out some deeper thoughts behind the Kepler laws. It is easily shown on an example of Sun and a planet. The force that emanates from Sun in all directions, so at distance r1 it will have a certain value. If the distance, for example doubles, the same force will be applied to a sphere at 2r1 distance. At r1 the area of the sphere is 4 r12. As r2 is 2r1, the same force will be spread across the area 4 times larger, and will be 4 times smaller for the distance of 2. 

In 1925 Heisenberg built his quantum theory not on any traditional Newtonian "observables" like position and velocity, but instead on the observables that are appropriate to the atomic world, namely the frequencies of light that atoms emit, and the amplitude, or intensity, or those spectral lines. He based his model on matrix algebra with infinite number of columns and rows. 

In 1926 Schrodinger presented his own quantum theory based on waves of matter and energy. This theory was easier to use and based on physics of waves already familiar to the physicists.

Monday 15 January 2018

"To Kill a Mocking Bird" by Harper Lee

Completed on 15th of January. Rated with 5 stars

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Review: 

A brilliant story. Unfortunately, absent from my reading list at high-school. A story of a local lawyer in the provincial Alabama and his two children - Jean Louise, nicknamed Scout, and her brother Jeremy, called Jem. The story is presented from Jean Louise’s perspective – precocious young girl of six, when the story begins and of nine years old when it ends. The novel presents a number of issues facing young people, combined with questions of truth, morality, courage, racism and diversity of human characters and lifestyles.

The title is based on the following fact. When Jem received his air raffle as his Christmas present, Atticus told him that to kill a mockingbird is a sin because they don’t do any harm and sing their hearts out for us. It could be extended to some of the characters in the story, especially Tom Robinson and Arthur (Boo) Radley.

Characters:

  1. Miss Maudie Atkinson - Atticus’ neighbour, where Scout spends a lot of time.
  2. Mr Richard Avery - a boarder across Mrs Dubose house.
  3. Miss Frutti Barber - one of the deaf sisters, who used a trumpet to hear.
  4. Miss Tutti Barber - one of the two deaf sisters
  5. Mr X Billups - arriving for the trial on a mule
  6. Lily Brooke - Finches’ cousin.
  7. Calpurnia (Cal) - Atticus black cook.
  8. Miss Stephanie Crawford - Atticus’ neighbour
  9. Mrs Crenshaw - the local seamstress, who prepared a costume for Scout.
  10. Mr Walter Cunningham - one of the men trying to lynch Tom Robinson, recognised by Scout.
  11. Walter Cunningham (Little Chuck) - a young boy at school, without any lunch. Can’t progress at school as he needs to work on his parents’ farm
  12. Miss Emily Davis - arriving for the trial. Dipped snuff in private.
  13. Mr Link Deas - one of the men visiting Atticus with sheriff about moving Tom Robinson from the court jail. He employed Tom as an agricultural worker.
  14. Mrs Henry Lafayette Dubose - lives up two doors from Finches’. Considered the meanest woman in the neighbourhood.
  15. Bob Ewell - father of Burris. Accused Tom Robinson of raping his daughter.
  16. Burris Ewell - a young student, always attending the first day of school only, and then working on his parents’ farm.
  17. Magellan Ewell - Ewell’s daughter, victim of alleged rape.
  18. Atticus Finch - a lawyer at Mycomb
  19. Ike Finch - Atticus’ cousin. The Confederate veteran.
  20. Jean Louise Finch (Scout) - a narrator of the story, Six years old at the beginning of the story.
  21. Jeremy (Jem) Finch - 9 y.o. Son of Atticus
  22. John Hale Finch - Atticus’ brother, 10 years younger than Atticus, studied medicine.
  23. Miss Caroline Fisher - young teacher, using a card system to teach kids read.
  24. Miss Gates - Scout’s teacher in grade three, who disapproved Hitler.
  25. Mr Gilmer - a court circuit solicitor.
  26. Alexandra Hancock - Atticus’ sister
  27. Francis Hancock - Aunt Alexandra’s son. One year older than Scout and disliked by her.
  28. Jimmy Hancock - Aunt Alexandra’s husband
  29. Charles Baker Harris (Dill) - 7 y.o. from Meridian, Mississippi, spending his summer holidays at his aunt’s place.
  30. Miss Rachel Haverford - an aunt of Dill.
  31. Cecil Jacobs - lives at the far end of the street. Accused Scout of her father defending black people.
  32. Ruth Jones - a welfare office lady
  33. Mr Tensaw Jones - arriving for the trial. Voted Prohibition ticket.
  34. Mrs Grace Merriweather - a faithful Methodist. Attended aunt Alexandra ladies’ meeting.
  35. Mr Arthur (Boo) Radley - mysterious neighbour, always staying inside.
  36. Mr Nathan Radley - Arthur’s father, living with Arthur.
  37. Mr Dolphus Raymond - arriving for the trial. Drunk before 8 o’clock in the morning. Staying with the coloured people.
  38. Helen Robinson - Tom’s wife, with 3 children.
  39. Tom Robinson - a black man defended by Atticus.
  40. Mr Jake Slade - arriving for the trial. Was cutting his third set of teeth.
  41. Reverend Sykes - a pastor in the First Purchase African M.E. Church, where Scout and Jem attended a mass with their housekeeper.
  42. Mr Heck Tate - the sheriff of Maycomb County
  43. John Taylor - a local judge
  44. Mr Braxton Underwood - an owner, editor and printer of the local newspaper The Maycomb Tribune.
  45. Mr Byron Waller - arriving for the trial. Could play the violin.
  46. Zeebo - a local black rubbish collector. Calpurnia’s son.

Charles Dickens - "Nicholas Nickleby"

Completed on 17 th of February 2018 Rated at 4 stars Review: As usual with Dickens, despite some sentimentalism and a ...