Thomas Hertog and Stephen Hawking's radical view of our universe and the origin of time. Why is it that the big bang created a universe where, miraculously, life is possible? This is perhaps the biggest question that Stephen Hawking has faced during his extraordinary life. For twenty years, Hawking and Thomas Hertog worked side by side on a new theory of the Big Bang that could explain this mysterious habitable nature of the universe. They discovered a deeper layer of evolution, hidden in the early stages of the universe, where the laws of nature themselves seemed to change. Matter, forces and time disappear in the Big Bang. This gave them a revolutionary idea: what if the laws of physics are not set in stone but are born and evolve with the young universe?Hertog takes readers on a dazzling space journey through black holes, cosmic holograms and far back in time, to our deepest roots. Shortly before Hawking's death, the two cosmologists published their theory, proposing a radically innovative, Darwinian perspective on the origin of our universe. A theory that jeopardizes the way we look at the cosmos.

This book gives you a behind-the-scenes look at the groundbreaking research by two top scientists, whose friendship and passion for the profession led to an entirely new vision of the cosmos. Hawking and Hertog's new theory interweaves the Big Bang deeper than ever before with our human existence and thus provides a new view of our place in this immensely large universe. '

A provocative and beautifully written account of both physics and the people involved in Hawking's visionary struggle to understand the cosmos.'dr. Neil Turok, author of The Universe Within “His years of collaboration with Stephen Hawking allow Hertog to describe from a privileged point of view how Hawking's physically imprisoned mind also produced amazing insights in his later years.'dr. Martin Rees, author of Our Cosmic Habitat “This book is not only an introduction to Hawking's latest theory, but also offers a glimpse into even larger theories in the future.'dr. Sean Carroll, author of The Biggest Ideas in the Universe: Space, Time, and Motion

Loading full article...