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Review: Cosmic Imagery by John Barrow

Sometimes in science, a picture really is worth a thousand words

COMBINING more than 200 images from the history of science with insightful essays, John Barrow’s Cosmic Imagery reveals the power a picture can have in shaping our understanding of the universe.

Some images are obvious choices, such as , , Watson and Crick’s and the Hubble Space Telescope’s of mind-bogglingly remote galaxies. There are also many less obvious ones, including Hermann Minkowski’s first , published in 1908, and a 15th-century student’s notebook showing the earliest surviving use of the plus and minus signs in algebra.

Astronomy is well represented and there is also a section on pure maths, with images ranging from the Platonic solids to the . We even get a brief history of the – a peculiar, one-sided surface that has found applications in industrial design and has inspired artists such as .

A few images seem questionable at first. For instance, what does the classic London Underground map have to do with science? Barrow reminds us that the colourful map is not just “an icon of 20th-century design” but also “the first topological map – a circuit board of lines and exchanges that reshaped the sociology of London”.

As with any anthology, one can always quibble with the author’s selections; to be sure, some images are more profound than others. All of them, though, have brought us a little closer to truly seeing our world – and often they have provided a deeper understanding than words or equations alone could convey.

Cosmic Imagery: Key images in the history of science

John D. Barrow

Bodley Head

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