The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood |  | Author: James Gleick Publisher: Pantheon Category: Book
List Price: CDN$ 34.00 Buy New: CDN$ 19.46 as of 5/24/2012 10:36 CDT details You Save: CDN$ 14.54 (43%)
New (21) Used (15) from CDN$ 19.46
Seller: bookeventsontario Sales Rank: 21,130
Format: Deckle Edge Languages: English (Unknown), English (Original Language), English (Published) Media: Hardcover Pages: 544 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.2 Dimensions (in): 6.8 x 1.9 x 9.5
ISBN: 0375423729 EAN: 9780375423727 ASIN: 0375423729
Publication Date: March 1, 2011 Availability: Usually ships within 1 - 2 business days
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| Also Available In:
| • | Paperback - The Information: A History, A Theory, A Flood | | • | Paperback - The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood | | • | Hardcover - The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood. by James Gleick | | • | Audio CD - The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood | | • | Paperback - The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood |
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| Editorial Reviews:
From Amazon Amazon Best Books of the Month, March 2011: In a sense, The Information is a book about everything, from words themselves to talking drums, writing and lexicography, early attempts at an analytical engine, the telegraph and telephone, ENIAC, and the ubiquitous computers that followed. But that's just the "History." The "Theory" focuses on such 20th-century notables as Claude Shannon, Norbert Wiener, Alan Turing, and others who worked on coding, decoding, and re-coding both the meaning and the myriad messages transmitted via the media of their times. In the "Flood," Gleick explains genetics as biology's mechanism for informational exchange--Is a chicken just an egg's way of making another egg?--and discusses self-replicating memes (ideas as different as earworms and racism) as information's own evolving meta-life forms. Along the way, readers learn about music and quantum mechanics, why forgetting takes work, the meaning of an "interesting number," and why "[t]he bit is the ultimate unsplittable particle." What results is a visceral sense of information's contemporary precedence as a way of understanding the world, a physical/symbolic palimpsest of self-propelled exchange, the universe itself as the ultimate analytical engine. If Borges's "Library of Babel" is literature's iconic cautionary tale about the extreme of informational overload, Gleick sees the opposite, the world as an endlessly unfolding opportunity in which "creatures of the information" may just recognize themselves. --Jason Kirk
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