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Nathan John Cooper

nathanjohncooper@bookwyrm.social

Joined 3 years, 9 months ago

Student at Arts University Bournemouth

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Nathan John Cooper's books

2025 Reading Goal

3% complete! Nathan John Cooper has read 2 of 52 books.

Stephen Hawking: Brief Answers to the Big Questions (Paperback, 2020, John Murray Press)

Brief Answers to the Big Questions is a popular science book written by physicist Stephen …

'We take death to reach a star' Vincent van Gogh

This book made me really quite emotional. To hear Hawkin talk about AI (which is now more prominent than ever), the development into a multi-planetary species (which we are now closer to than ever), and fusion power (which has had recent and vast breakthroughs) without being here to witness their developments in rather upsetting. Steven Hawkin died in 2018, I was just fourteen years old. Weirdly, though, I remember crying a lot. I had heard lots about Hawkin, seen him on the news, and really enjoyed listening to the small news segments that would show clips of him talking. Five years later - and during the afterword to this short book - I found myself crying again. There is something so beautiful about Steven Hawkin's life and I find his story deeply inspiring. I am so grateful for the impact that he had on this world

George Orwell: Nineteen Eighty-Four (Paperback, 2012, Penguin Books)

Newspeak, Doublethink, Big Brother, the Thought Police - the language of 1984 has passed into …

Content warning Spoiler Alert.

Stephen Hawking: Brief Answers to the Big Questions (Paperback, 2020, John Murray Press)

Brief Answers to the Big Questions is a popular science book written by physicist Stephen …

The escape velocity is just over 11 kilometres per second for the Earth, and about 617 kilometres per second for the Sun. Both of these are much higher than the speed of real cannon balls. But they are low compared to the speed of light, which is 300,000 kilometres per second. Thus light can get away from the Earth or Sun without much difficulty. However, Michell argued that there could be stars that were much more massive than the Sun which had escape velocities greater than the speed of light. We would not be able to see them, because any light they sent out would be dragged back by gravity. Thus they would be what Michell called dark stars, what we now call black holes.

Brief Answers to the Big Questions by 

Great explanation on why black holes are so dark.

Stephen Hawking: Brief Answers to the Big Questions (Paperback, 2020, John Murray Press)

Brief Answers to the Big Questions is a popular science book written by physicist Stephen …

This book is dense with beautiful knowledge. I listened to the audiobook version whilst running at night and, thus, couldn't make the same notes I normally do. I am currently trying to find all the aspects that I wanted to take note of though.

Anthropic principle: The universe has to be (more-or-less) how we see it because, if it were different, there wouldn't be anyone here to observe it.

Stephen Hawking: Brief Answers to the Big Questions (Paperback, 2020, John Murray Press)

Brief Answers to the Big Questions is a popular science book written by physicist Stephen …

After reading three fictitious and dystopian novels in short succession (Fahrenheit 451, Animal Farm, and Nineteen Eighty-Four), I now want to delve into some science reads. Speaking of, I have a list called 'Science Reads' of all the scientific books that stand-out to me for their quality if anyone is interested. The list is, of course, designed with myself in mind but, with the popularity of each book, will surely be appropriate for a rather large demographic.

George Orwell: Nineteen Eighty-Four (Paperback, 2012, Penguin Books)

Newspeak, Doublethink, Big Brother, the Thought Police - the language of 1984 has passed into …

Some of the words I got from this book: - heretic (a person who holds controversial opinions) - sententious (terse and energetic in expression) - vitality (the capacity to live, grow, or develop) - proletarian (relating to a proletarian or to the proletariat (the class of people who do unskilled work))

(There were many more fantastic words but I was so encapsulated in the plot that I could not stop myself from reading to note them down)