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E-grāmata: Waves Passing in the Night: Walter Murch in the Land of the Astrophysicists

3.68/5 (108 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: 176 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-Jan-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Bloomsbury USA
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781632867209
  • Formāts - EPUB+DRM
  • Cena: 23,67 €*
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  • Formāts: 176 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-Jan-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Bloomsbury USA
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781632867209

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Describes the life and work of an Academy Award-winning sound editor, whose passion for astrophysics has led him to develop a theory about the ways that celestial bodies align themselves in patterns across the universe, which has been discredited by most scientists.

Offers a profile of Academy Award winning sound and film editor Walter Murch and his amateur work in astrophysics as an outsider trying to rehabilitate the discredited eighteenth-century Titius-Bode theory.

From Pulitzer Prize nominee Lawrence Weschler, a fascinating profile of a film legend and amateur astrophysicist whose investigations could reshape our understanding of the universe.

For film aficionados, Walter Murch is legendary--a three-time Academy Award winner, arguably the most admired sound editor in the world for his work on Apocalypse Now, The Godfather trilogy, The English Patient, and many others. Outside of the studio, his mind is wide-ranging; his passion, pursued for several decades, is astrophysics, and in particular a theory regarding the patterns by which planets and moons array themselves in gravitational systems across the universe. Though widely discredited by most professional scientists, Murch has nonetheless made advances even some of them find intriguing, including a connection between the Titius-Bode law as it's known and earlier notions--going back past Kepler to Pythagoras--of musical harmony in the heavens. Unfazed by rejection, Murch marches on in the best tradition of outsider science.

Lawrence Weschler brings Murch's quest alive in its seemingly quixotic, yet still plausible, splendor, probing the basis for how we know what we know, and who gets to say. "The wholesale rejection of alternative theories has repeatedly held back the progress of vital science," Weschler observes, citing early twentieth-century German amateur Alfred Wegener, whose speculations about continental drift were ridiculed at first, only to be accepted as fact years later. Theoretical physicist Lee Smolin says "It is controversy that brings science alive"--and Murch's quest does that in spades. His fascination with the way the planets and their moons are arranged opens up the field of celestial mechanics for general readers, sparking an awareness of the vast and (to us) invisible forces constantly at play in the universe.

Overture ix
Part One Distant Music
1(72)
Part Two Troughs and Swells
73(74)
Coda 147(4)
Acknowledgments and Sources 151(7)
Image Credits 158(1)
Index 159