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Irriducibile is an exciting essay, capable of holding together scientific rigor, technological vision and spiritual inspiration, which suggests an indispensable and unprecedented physics of the inner world. Crystalline in its informative parts (quantum mechanics, consciousness, information theory), illuminating in the new connections it proposes and, finally, exhilarating in the idea it promotes of how to be truly, deeply, human.
Gianrico Carofiglio - In Praise of Ignorance and Error by Gianrico Carofiglio
Since we were children, we are told that if you make a mistake, you get a bad grade; if you make a mistake, you don't get promoted and you don't make a career, in some cases you even lose your job; if you make a mistake, you lose the respect of others and even your own. Making a mistake is breaking the rules, making a mistake is failing. For ignorance, if possible, the contours are even clearer: ignorance relegates to marginality. And when we move from the definition of the condition (ignorance) to the expression that indicates the subject in that condition (ignorant), the lexicon acquires the connotation of offense. In reality, mistakes are an inevitable part of the learning and growth processes, and admitting them is a fundamental step for the development of open minds and balanced personalities. Just as observing with sympathy our boundless, encyclopedic ignorance is often the premise for never ceasing to be amazed and rejoicing in the wonders of science, art, nature.
Carlo Rovelli - L'ordine del tempo
Like the Seven Brief Lessons in Physics, which has reached an immense audience all over the world, this book is about something in physics that speaks to and engages everyone, simply because it is a mystery that everyone experiences at all times: the time. It is a mystery not only for any layman, but also for physicists, who have seen time transform radically, from Newton to Einstein, to quantum mechanics, finally to theories of loop gravity, of which Rovelli himself is one of the main theorists. In Newton's equations it was always present, but today time disappears in the fundamental equations of physics. Past and future no longer oppose each other as long thought. And what anyone believes to be the only safe element is vanishing through physics: the present. They are three examples of the extraordinary encounters on which this book focuses, which is a look at what physics was and together introduces us to the workshop where physics is being done today.