![]() ![]() In both cases, we soon discover that the author has a highly non-standard but strangely persuasive view of their respective subject, which involves juxtaposition of elements normally considered in isolation. For Penrose, it's modern physics for Quigley, it's world history during the period from 1895 to 1960. ![]() In both cases, we have an unusually gifted person, who sets out to present an integrated overview of an entire field. ![]() This gigantic book - 1350 pages! - reminds me in an odd way of Roger Penrose's almost equally massive The Road to Reality, which I read last year. ![]()
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