igormdemiranda's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Eu era bem jovem quando tive o primeiro contato com a obra de Carl Sagan. Foi pelas mãos de meu irmão, que tanto influenciou o meu interesse pela música e pela ciência, que pude conhecer 'O Mundo Assombrado pelos Demônios', o livro mais famoso do cientista americano. Foi a partir desse ponto que comecei a me aprofundar na beleza da física e do universo pelas palavras daquele que se tornaria um de meus maiores ídolos.

Sagan, nesse processo, mudou a forma como eu pensava sobre a vida, sobre a religião, sobre o nosso papel no universo. Ele me mostrou que a consciência de nosso tamanho diminuto diante do universo não nos diminui, não nos faz menores, não rebaixa a nossa humanidade, muito pelo contrário; saber que, apesar de nosso tamanho diminuto, tivemos a curiosidade e capacidade exploratória de enxergar e teorizar coisas tão distantes de nós acaba por nos engrandecer enormemente.

Nessa obra, a temática não poderia ser diferente. 'The Varieties of Scientific Experience' é um compilado das aulas de Sagan na famosa convenção Gifford sobre teologia na Escócia. Por elas, Sagan derrama seu incrível intelecto na análise do sagrado em meio ao cosmos, trazendo para a mesa discussões sobre a formação do universo, a vida em outros planetas e a impossibilidade, ao seu ver, de um universo criacionista.

"Cada um de nós é, sob uma perspectiva cósmica, precioso. Se um humano discorda de você, deixe-o viver. Em cem bilhões de galáxias, você não vai achar outro como ele"

Com uma reverência a beleza da ciência e do universo, Carl Sagan é, para mim, o mais religioso de todos os ateus. Suas crenças moldaram as minhas e, a isso e a ele, eu sempre serei grato. Leia Sagan!

[O livro possui versão em português: 'Variedades da Experiência Científica' pela Companhia das Letras]

ria_mhrj's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

Very thought provoking, but I did get left in the scientific-jargon dust more than once. Still not made me an atheist, but I much preferred the sincere questioning approach Sagan adopted, compared with Dawkins' dismissive and patronising approach in The God Delusion.

I wonder if the fact that this was based on a series of lectures rather than planned out to be a book made it a little harder to follow, each lecture/essay could have benefitted from a clear theme or topic, rather than the all-encompassing discussions we get... But I also fully recognise that I am a layman and smarter people than me will have got a lot more from this (hi Persad!).

frauadarain's review against another edition

Go to review page

inspiring fast-paced

5.0

jpreece10's review

Go to review page

adventurous hopeful informative slow-paced

4.5

poirotketchup's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

A beautiful illustration of Carl Sagan's lifelong quest to promote a spiritual skepticism. Sagan debunks canals on Mars in one chapter, and endorses theologian Paul Tillich in another, and introduces the book with a chapter describing his awe at the universe, using NASA photographs as 20th Century icons to ponder and commune with.

While he does an excellent job dismissing several arguments against evolutionary theory, his goal isn't to dismantle traditional religion; rather it's to share his vision of humanity as one with the stars.

bluebirdrose's review

Go to review page

funny hopeful informative inspiring lighthearted reflective slow-paced

3.25

karwolfkill's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Sagan models clear and respectful dialog--as always.

moleodonuts's review

Go to review page

5.0

Sagan always seems to impress me. I've read books, articles, and lectures by him ranging from astronomy to abortion. This book, dealing with religion, really kept with the quality of arguments I expect from Sagan. He keys in on how god has been displaced further and further into more abstract realms, variations on the definition of god - talking about Einstein's god quite a bit, and the human race's personal responsibility to keep from killing itself. A++

jamiereadthis's review

Go to review page

5.0

My copy of this stays loaned out about ten months out of the year, so whenever it falls back into my hands for a week or two I’m practically duty-bound to eat it up as quick as I can.

Verdict: best as ever. If you read this book and don’t have some fundamental opinions changed, then we’ll probably be friends because you hold them in the first place.

Also, I always forget (though probably no longer, writing something down has a way of solving that problem) that Kurt Vonnegut is the only blurb for the book, right on the back cover. On Carl: “I miss him so.”

Don’t we all.

-----

June 2009 review:

There’s nothing I could say about Carl Sagan (his work, his writing, his imitable open-minded approach to our world and everything beyond it) that hasn’t already been said, but I think that if there were one person, living or dead, with whom I could talk for days on end, my pick would be him.

kurtisbaute's review

Go to review page

3.0

I'm a Sagan addict, but this book didn't blow my mind. Transcribed from a series of lectures, it is a bit dated. I read it as an ebook and the slides didn't really sync very well with the content. I still think there are some brilliant quotes and ideas in it, but I think I've set the bar for Carl as being too high..
More...