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24 ratings, 3.71 average rating, 3 reviews
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published
February 1st 2005
by University of California Press
binding
Paperback, 664 pages
isbn
0520244761
(isbn13: 9780520244764)
description
An introduction to a new way of looking at history, from a perspective that stretches from the beginning of time to the present day, Maps of Time i...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 37)
bookshelves:
wciu
recommends it for: science nerds
Read in April, 2008
recommended to Morgan by:
WCIUrecommends it for: science nerds
I must say, the author of this book is really intelligent, going into more detail on every aspect of, well, everything then any other scientific book I've read. However, he is not a Christian, and I didn't agree with most of his viewpoints. And while this is a book regarding his viewpoints on the latest scientific facts regarding our universe, he is never rude or condescending of those views that oppose his. He is quite tactful and gentle in his cross-examination of any opposing views. He ha...more
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Read in December, 2007
recommends it for:
Uninspired Historians
This book's main endeavor is to flesh out what is, apparently, the nascent field of 'Big Picture' research in history. That 'Big Picture' sense of history is mostly very large scale trends and very little attention to individuals. Which would hardly qualify as new if your family with the dialecticians and their ilk (Hegel, Marx, my grandmother) with their insistence on predictable progress, goal minded evolution, and over-arching narrative.
This is actually this first issue we encounter in t...more
This is actually this first issue we encounter in t...more
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bookshelves:
history
Read in June, 2008
The history of the world in less than 510 pages, and starting with the Big Bang. Humans don't appear until around page 110. Still a very interesting book. Of course, he misses a lot of the high points of history. Instead, as he describes the the forces that created the universe, he surveys the forces that have created the world's cultures. Centering mostly on the economical, giving the book a somewhat Marxist feel.
It is an interesting contrast to the very specific studies of history. I ...more
It is an interesting contrast to the very specific studies of history. I ...more
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history (on 4 people's shelves)
currently-reading (on 2 people's shelves)
science (on 1 person's shelf)
toacquire (on 1 person's shelf)
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history--general (on 1 person's shelf)
general-history (on 1 person's shelf)
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