Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Quantum Paradox - The Mysteries of Time Unveiled - cover

Quantum Paradox - The Mysteries of Time Unveiled

Asif Ahmed Srabon

Publisher: BookRix

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

Explore the mind-bending world of quantum physics and the enigma of time in "Quantum Paradox: The Mysteries of Time Unveiled" by Asif Ahmed Srabon. This book delves into entanglement, time travel, and paradoxes, unraveling the mysteries that have fascinated scientists and philosophers for ages. Get ready for a thought-provoking adventure that challenges your understanding of reality.
Available since: 12/20/2023.
Print length: 33 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • Horses And Ponies - cover

    Horses And Ponies

    Shelagh Canning

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Kids will love this sweet story as they listen to “Horses and Ponies” and follow along word-for-word in this adorably illustrated eBook. Children will get to watch how a horse grows up, from the time they're born as a foal, to all the different ways they make our lives great as adults. Kids and parents alike will enjoy reading along to “Horses and Ponies” over and over again!
    Show book
  • Torrents As Yet Unknown - Daring Whitewater Ventures into the World's Great River Gorges - cover

    Torrents As Yet Unknown - Daring...

    Wickliffe W. Walker

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Pioneering whitewater explorer Wick Walker examines what lured a generation of incredibly daring pioneers into some of Earth's most wondrous yet forbidding river canyons: below Victoria Falls on the Zambezi; the Great Bend of the Tsangpo in Tibet; Tiger Leaping Gorge on the Yangtze; the flanks of Mount Everest; and more. 
     
     
     
    Loaded with great moments and personal stories, Wick details what these adventurers found there, and within themselves. The extraordinary characters, driven by different motives and visions, but united by their compulsion to seek the unknown and the pulse of free-flowing water, are as remarkable as the daunting geography and conditions they confront. 
     
     
     
    Whitewater sport today stands side-by-side with mountaineering in participation and public attention, yet it has lagged in generating its own literature. Torrents As Yet Unknown will help fill that gap for listeners interested in human drama played out against great natural challenges. 
     
     
     
    Mountaineering history is deep and its literature rich, but whitewater adventurers approach and experience the same forbidding terrain from a different vantage, between the walls of their canyons and atop powerful torrents of cascading water.
    Show book
  • The Storytelling Manual for Architects - A heartfelt manifesto for a better way to write and talk about what you do - cover

    The Storytelling Manual for...

    Juliette Mitchell

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Storytelling is one of the most powerful tools we have. But we're not talking about a story as a nice-to-have or an occasional distraction from the real work you do. We’re talking about story as the backbone and the underlying structure, and story as a way of ordering your thoughts and connecting with those around you.
    If you want to make the most of every page on your website, every email to your clients and every conversation on site, this is the guidebook you need. It gives you a simple, flexible structure to tell the stories of your practice, your projects, your process, and your team. And, more than that, it reframes writing not as a chore but as an act of clarity and connection.
    The Storytelling Manual for Architects is a short, practical book with a very human mission – to help you find common ground, convey your worth, and show your clients the difference you can make. It’s a heartfelt manifesto for a better way to write and talk about what you do.
    Juliette Mitchell set up Architypal, a writing consultancy for architects, after many years as an editor at Penguin Books. The Storytelling Manual for Architects is both her step-by-step messaging strategy and her personal act of resistance in the face of AI and things to come.
    
    ‘It’s a great little book – both succinct and spirited!’ Ceri Davies, director at Allford Hall Monaghan Morris
    ‘This book is so good, I don’t want to recommend it to other architects. I want to keep it all to myself.’ Lee Holmes, associate director at Wainwrights
    ‘Joyous, loving, accessible, practical, and just what the doctor ordered.’ Barbara Iddon, co-author of Blueprints for the Soul: Why we need emotion in architecture
    ‘I devoured about 80% of it in the first sitting. Full of good and clear ideas.’ Paul Sheeran, principal at Architexture
    ‘Part guidebook, part pep talk, part love letter to clearer, kinder architectural communication. Practical, readable, and quietly radical.’ Simon Drayson, director at George & James Architects
    Show book
  • Sundaland: The History of the Asian Landmass that Started Sinking After the Ice Age - cover

    Sundaland: The History of the...

    Editors Charles River

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    By the time the Pleistocene Epoch ended around 12,000 years ago, Homo sapiens had become one of the most significant species on the planet. 	It was also near the end of that period of time that modern humans began to gradually populate what would become Europe, Asia, and the Americas, eventually becoming the inheritors of the Paleolithic era and the only human species to make it into the Neolithic era. The process was long and difficult, and the survival of the species only happened through a combination of human tenacity and a fair amount of luck. As much as humans evolved during the Pleistocene, the topography, geography, and environment changed even more. 
    The cold Pleistocene temperatures lowered water levels across the planet, exposing land that was not there before or after the period. At the same time, significant regions of the planet were very different during the Pleistocene, including Southeast Asia, particularly the modern islands of Bali, Borneo, Sumatra, and the Malay Peninsula, roughly equivalent to parts of Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, and Thailand. This region, which modern scholars refer to as Sunda or Sundaland, was unique because all of it was connected by land, meaning today’s islands were once part of a contiguous subcontinent, and in terms of the people, flora, and fauna, it was very different than it is today. If a modern traveler could somehow transport back to the Pleistocene, Sundaland would look nothing like modern Southeast Asia and would resemble as much of a lost world as something out of a science fiction novel.  
    Although much is still unknown about Sundaland, researchers have uncovered plenty of evidence bringing this lost world to life. As anthropologists and archaeologists developed new models and discovered ancient material culture, they learned that Sundaland played a significant role in the development of Neolithic Southeast Asia in many ways. 
    Show book
  • One-Click to Give - Future Proof Your Fundraising with Social Media - cover

    One-Click to Give - Future Proof...

    Jeremy Berman, Nicky Black

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The world of fundraising is changing.In an increasingly digital world, traditional in-person fundraising events are not enough to support a thriving nonprofit. People want to be able to donate to causes conveniently and on the social platforms where they spend their time. Through their donation, they wish to share in a nonprofit’s mission and connect with a community of supporters. This–and much more–is possible through social giving–a new mode for fundraising.Every nonprofit can leverage social giving to maximize their fundraising potential, energizing their nonprofit to do good. In One-Click to Give, Jeremy Berman and Nick Black, founders of GoodUnited, share how they’ve partnered with nonprofits from across the U.S. to raise over $1 billion through social giving. You’ll learn how to create a future-proof social giving strategy that lays the foundation for a thriving community of supporters.
    Show book
  • The Anatomy of Deception - Conspiracy Theories Distrust and Public Health in America - cover

    The Anatomy of Deception -...

    Sara E. Gorman

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    In the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, trust in the healthcare system seems to be at an all-time low. Conspiracy theories are now mainstream, and distrust of government health agencies is common among private citizens. Yet many of those same individuals still profess trust in their doctors. What, then, is driving the general mistrust in medicine, and how can the public's faith be restored? 
     
     
     
    The Anatomy of Deception investigates the cause behind this seeming uptick in distrust by tracing the unexpected connection between medical mistrust and the move toward far right ideology in the United States. Drawing on personal qualitative research and interviews, health writer and expert Sara Gorman challenges traditional concepts of medical mistrust and argues that the loss of institutional trust in American health care signals a larger breakdown in democracy as a whole. In six short chapters, Gorman advances the idea of medical mistrust not as a byproduct of personal or historical abuses but as a direct result of bias, miscommunication, and lack of access that has slowly eroded trust in the public health system over time. She argues that we can build back trust in medicine through investments in health equity as a first step towards healing the schisms present in modern American society.
    Show book