Saturday, June 27, 2015

J. Canales. The physicist and the philosopher.

Another hanger-on to Einstein's fame and persona, telling the story of relativity as a parallel to Bergsonian philosophy.

The book depicts Einstein as a petulant brat basking in rays of his own popularity. Certainly, he was a Prussian man of his generation--for instance, thinking that a wife's rage at her man's infidelities--is a "usual" female hysteria. But he was unusually enlightened for his day and age.

I cannot vouch how accurately the author reproduces Bergson's concepts of time and space but her understanding of relativity and its place in contemporary science is superficial.

Saturday, June 6, 2015

Michael Benson. Cosmigraphics.

A beautiful book-album. Illustrations of Trouvelot--Harvard-French draftsman of celestial phenomena are pure marvel.