Craig Martin

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Some fourteen billion years ago, the entire observable universe—all that we can see using the most powerful telescopes imaginable—was compressed into a stupendously hot, incredibly dense nugget, which then rapidly expanded. Cooling as it swelled, particles gradually slowed their frenzied motion and aggregated into clumps, which over time formed stars, planets, all manner of gaseous and rocky debris scattered across space—and us.
Until the End of Time: Mind, Matter, and Our Search for Meaning in an Evolving Universe
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