scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

The Anthropic Cosmological Principle

TLDR
In this article, Barrow and Tipler examined the question of Mankind's place in the universe, taking the reader on a tour of many scientific disciplines and offering fascinating insights into issues such as the nature of life, the serach for extraterrestrial intelligence, and the past history and fate of our universe.
Abstract
Is there any connection between the vastness of the universes of stars and galaxies and the existence of life on a small planet out in the suburbs of the Milky Way? This book shows that there is. In their classic work, John Barrow and Frank Tipler examine the question of Mankind's place in the Universe, taking the reader on a tour of many scientific disciplines and offering fascinating insights into issues such as the nature of life, the serach for extraterrestrial intelligence, and the past history and fate of our universe.

read more

Citations
More filters

Environmentally Aware Art, Poetry, Music and Spirituality: Lifelines

David Levey, +1 more
TL;DR: Mann et al. as discussed by the authors presented Lifelines, a holistic work of environmental art based on encounters with forty animals, ranging from the aardvark and bees to the peregrine falcon and zebra, in images by Julia Skeen on each right hand page of the book.
Book ChapterDOI

Genes, Brains, Minds: The Human Complex

TL;DR: John Maynard Smith and Eors Szathmary analyze “the major transitions in evolution” with the resulting complexity, asking how and why this complexity has increased in the course of evolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Drake Equation for the Multiverse: From the String Landscape to Complex Life

TL;DR: In this paper, it is argued that selection criteria usually referred to as "anthropic conditions" for the existence of intelligent (typical) observers widely adopted in cosmology amount only to preconditions for primitive life.
Book ChapterDOI

Lemaître’s Prescience: The Beginning and End of the Cosmos

TL;DR: Lemaitre as discussed by the authors argued that cosmology offers some scope for productive science-religion dialogue and suggest that mind may be a fundamental rather than incidental feature of the universe.
Related Papers (5)