Cosmos

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Carl Sagan: Cosmos (French language, 1981, Mazarine)

Hardcover, 366 pages

French language

Published Jan. 5, 1981 by Mazarine.

OCLC Number:
427558505

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5 stars (2 reviews)

Cosmos is the book version of Carl Sagan's famous television series of the same name. While it certainly is about Sagan's field of expertise, astronomy, it also a survey of the intellectual history of mankind. Sagan shows us that not only did ancient Greek mathematicians know that the earth is a sphere, with the work of Eratosthenes in the third century B.C., they even knew its circumference - and Sagan allows his readers to easily appreciate both the logic and the calculations involved. A page or two later readers are introduced to the existence of the wondrous ancient "Library at Alexandria," a university-like complex in Egypt "where we humans first collected, seriously and systematically, the knowledge of the world...." As the pages and chapters fly by, we are treated to Kepler, Copernicus, and Galileo; to Apollo missions, time dilation, Mars landers, and Arecibo. And tantalizing readers throughout is one of …

23 editions

Review of 'Cosmos' on 'Storygraph'

5 stars

This book is about man's curiosity towards the stars and how this curiosity has spurred our scientific research. He explains, in very understandable terms, human history and its history in the Galaxy with an unbreidled enthousiasm that is really pulls in the reader. Mister Sagan takes us on an epic voyage through all of space and time, where he teaches us about our solar system and its creation, about the evolution of mankind and its future, and he explores the most strange and fascinating places in the universe, and how we as a species have unravelled these mysteries, and how we keep unravelling the myriads of mysteries that lay before us.

Subjects

  • Astronomy
  • Intellectual history of mankind