This book follows 'An Experiment With Time', and examines the implications of Dunne's 'Serialism' for the physical sciences. Most of the book is accessible to the interested non-mathematical reader, and you are unlikely to find a better short history of the arguments and experiments giving rise to quantum theory than that found in part three.
This book follows 'An Experiment With Time', and examines the implications of Dunne's 'Serialism' for the physical sciences. Most of the book is accessible to the interested non-mathematical reader, and you are unlikely to find a better short history of the arguments and experiments giving rise to quantum theory than that found in part three.