Conversations with Carl Sagan

Conversations with Carl Sagan

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4.03 of 5 stars 4.03  ·  rating details  ·  141 ratings  ·  3 reviews

Though a well-regarded physicist, Carl Sagan (1934-1996) is best-known as a writer of popular nonfiction and science fiction and as the host of the PBS series Cosmos. Through his writings and spoken commentary, he worked to popularize interests in astronomy, the universe, and the possibility of extraterrestrial life. From the beginning of his public career, when he co-wrot

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Paperback, 167 pages
Published January 5th 2006 by University Press of Mississippi (first published December 1st 2005)
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Nicol
Carl Sagan was a down to earth, everyday man who was also a genius in the field of planetary science. He encouraged the common person to look up and ask questions about the Universe around us, and in doing that, to explore the world around us. He made science attainable to everyone. This is a book containing interviews with Sagan from his time working with the Viking lander to his television series Cosmos to his final days bringing his novel Contact to the big screen. You really get a sense of h...more
Kit Fox
Fun stuff, but got incredibly repetitive halfway through. Guess that's more a failing on the interviewers' part than on this book. Sagan also developed a predictable group of rote responses by the end, but I can't blame him for getting a little tired of always having to field gems along the lines of "Do you believe in UFOs?" and "Is the government lying to us about UFOs?" and "Do you believe in God?" and "Space is, like, really big, right?" My favorite interview was the one where someone followe...more
Megan Mudge
I had originally thought this book would be more of a one-on-one long form interview with Sagan, but it turned out to be just a collection of interviews done by magazines or radio stations. That was a bit disappointing for me as I was hoping for something more personal and deep. Sagan was often asked the same questions in the interviews (thoughts on religion, UFO's, global warming, etc.), so I found a lot of repetition throughout the book. Many of the topics are also covered in Sagan's own books...more
Paul Dodaro
Fantasy book. Sagan's personality and humanity come out when reading these interviews.
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Conversations with Carl Sagan (Literary Conversations)
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Author of It's Your World So Change It (Que/Pearson), Civil Liberties A Beginner's Guide (Oneworld UK), and 22 other nonfiction books on a wide range of topics; About.com guide to civil liberties.
More about Tom Head...
Civil Liberties: A Beginner's Guide Religion and Education (At Issue) It's Your World, So Change It Absolute Beginner's Guide to the Bible Possessions and Exorcisms (Fact or Fiction?)

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“An atheist is someone who is certain that God does not exist, someone who has compelling evidence against the existence of God. I know of no such compelling evidence. Because God can be relegated to remote times and places and to ultimate causes, we would have to know a great deal more about the universe than we do now to be sure that no such God exists. To be certain of the existence of God and to be certain of the nonexistence of God seem to me to be the confident extremes in a subject so riddled with doubt and uncertainty as to inspire very little confidence indeed.” 4 people liked it
“...there is no deeper religious feeling than the feeling for the natural world. I wouldn't separate the world of nature from the religious instinct...I would not even object to saying that the sense of awe before the grandeur of nature is itself a religious experience.” 1 person liked it
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