With a title inspired as much by Douglas Adams' Hitchhiker  series as Einstein, The Theory of Everything delivers almost as  much as it promises. Transcribed from Stephen Hawking's Cambridge  Lectures, the slim volume may not present a single theory unifying  gravity with the other fundamental forces, but it does carefully explain  the state of late 20th-century physics with the great scientist's  characteristic humility and charm. Explicitly shunning math, Hawking  explains the fruits of 100 years of heavy thinking with metaphors that  are simple but never condescending--he compares the settling of the  newborn universe into symmetry to the formation of ice crystals in a  glass of water, for example. While he explores his own work (especially  when speaking about black holes), he also discusses the important  milestones achieved by others like Richard Feynman. Though occasionally  an impenetrably obscure phrase does slip by, the reader will find the  bulk of the text enlightening and engaging. The material, from the  nature of time to the possibility that the universe has no beginning or  end, is rich and deep and inevitably ignites metaphysical thinking.  After all, Hawking is famous for his "we would know the mind of God"  remark, which ends the final lecture herein. --Rob Lightner.
 
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