Eternity: Our Next Billion Years

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Palgrave Macmillan, 2009 - Music - 300 pages
"Received wisdom says that our world is doomed, that we live in the End of Days. Our greed and profligacy will be the end of us, and of our planet, in very short order indeed. If not global warming, then supervolcanoes, meteoric impacts, nuclear war, bioterrorism or some natural plague will spell Armageddon." "In fact, there is a strong argument to be made that we may be around for a lot longer than most people think. Humans have, after all, already seen off several ice ages, gigantic volcanic eruptions and terrifying plagues. We may indeed be doomed - but it is also at least possible that a long, difficult but ultimately rewarding future lies ahead of us. As for Planet Earth - it has survived everything the Solar System (and its recent inhabitants) have thrown at it for more than four and a half billion years. It is hard to see its story coming to an end any time soon." "So what will the future be like? What world will our descendants, if there are any, inhabit a thousand, ten thousand, a million years hence? What will happen to Earth in the millennia to come? How will our bodies, our minds, our societies change? Is our future the much-predicted one of flying cars, clones and robot slaves? Are we looking forward to a post-apocalyptic nightmare or something utterly weird and unforeseen?" "We do not know, but this provocative book sketches out a number of possibilities. Some futures are exciting, some are depressing; all take for granted that the one thing we know for certain about this Universe is that time is not in short supply. Whatever happens, stuff will go on existing." "Our future is in many ways bizarre, surreal and sometimes terrifying. The world of 10,000 years hence, let alone 100,000,000 years hence, will be strange and almost unrecognisable. But it will still be our world."--BOOK JACKET.

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About the author (2009)

MICHAEL HANLON is one of Britain's most successful science writers. He has been Science Editor at the Daily Mail for many years; prior to this he was at the Daily Express, the Independent and Irish News. He contributes regularly to magazines such as the Spectator, New Scientist Standpoint and appears on TV and radio as a science pundit. He has headlined several science festivals and written four critically acclaimed popular science books before this one: Ten Questions Science Can't Answer (Yet) (Macmillan 2007), The Science Of The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy (Macmillan, 2005), The Real Mars (Constable, 2004) and The Worlds of Galileo (Constable, 2001)

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