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From Human Universe, episode one.
Never was the human universe so large yet so small.
Human Universe with Professor Brian Cox starts Tuesday 7 October, at 9pm on BBC2.
Human Universe by Brian Cox and Andrew Cohen is out in paperback, published by HarperCollins.
There's something unnecessarily anthropocentric about the title of Brian Cox's new show, Human Universe.
There's pathos as well as stupidity in pining for a human universe diabolically ordered "in rows".
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In the last post I challenged Brian Cox, the author of Human Universe--a book, ironically enough, that rejects the concept of a human universe--to confront the current crisis in physics.
But the human universe--the one that is such a perfect fit for Homo sapiens--is the opposite of random.
In this stuffy little all-too-human universe, words did not stand for given things; on the contrary, things stood for given words— words in the Bible or in one of the treatises of Aristotle.
This includes other selves (since Russell considered a purely selfish life unfulfilling, and a life without history which involves knowledge of other selves drab) but also the wholly other the non-human universe of large impersonal forces, the wind, the sea, the mountains and the stars and even (if they exist) the entities of mathematics.
Any system -- an atom, a human, the universe -- can be completely described by the answers to a few tens of yes-no questions (20 questions, anyone?); that is, a few tens of bits.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com