Author:Michio Kaku
From the bestselling author of Physics of the Impossible, Michio Kaku's Parallel Worlds takes us to the frontiers of scientific knowledge to explain the extraordinary nature - and future - of our universe.
Imagine a future where we are not alone - where our universe is just one of countless parallel worlds, some strangely familiar, some almost unimaginable. And that, when planet earth finally runs down to a cold, dark wasteland, we will be able to escape into these new worlds and start again.
Michio Kaku's thrilling guide to the galaxy shows us how it could happen sooner than we think - and the future for intelligent life is one of endless possibilities.
'This book is absolutely impossible to put down ... if and when we do find out what the universe is, and how it was created, it's going to be absolutely mind-blowing'
Independent on Sunday
'One of the gurus of modern physics'
Financial Times
'An exhilarating read ... nobody who reads this book can be anything less than amazed by the possibilities it presents'
Scotland on Sunday
'The journey he takes the reader on is so picturesque and the conclusions so startling that you are gripped'
Sunday Telegraph
Michio Kaku is a leading theoretical physicist and one of the founders of string theory, widely regarded as the strongest candidate for the 'theory of everything'. He is also one of the most gifted popularizers of science of his generation. His books published by Penguin include Parallel Worlds, The Physics of the Future and The Physics of the Impossible. He holds the Henry Semat Professorship in Theoretical Physics at the City University of New York, where he has taught for over twenty-five years.
While this book is a magisterial survey of what we currently understand about the human brain and mind, it is also a profoundly personal rumination on the sources and consequences of that knowledge
—— Sunday TelegraphEspecially valuable
—— Nigel Hawkes , The TimesA timely book on a timely subject
—— ObserverIf you are interested in brains or having a mind you must read this
—— New ScientistClear and eloquent
—— Daily MailAn excellent account of neuroscience today
—— Financial TimesAn elegantly written and cogent guide to contemporary ideas about how and why the brain works
—— IndependentRose has a subtle mind, a prose style of great clarity and a civilised and compassionate approach to what neuroscience tells us about human nature
—— Sunday Times