Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Stephen Hawking and the Theory of Everything (2007) Stephen Hawking: Master of the Universe (2008) [431] Into the Universe with Stephen Hawking (2010) [432] Brave New World with Stephen Hawking (2011) [433] Stephen Hawking's Grand Design (2012) [434] The Big Bang Theory (2012, 2014–2015, 2017) Stephen Hawking: A Brief History of Mine (2013) [435]
— John Battaglia, right before being executed (1 February 2018) "Remember to look up at the stars and not down at your feet." [167] — Stephen Hawking, English physicist, cosmologist, and author (14 March 2018), in his book, Brief Answers to the Big Questions "It burns, man." [168] — Robert Earl Butts Jr., during his execution (4 May 2018)
Neil deGrasse Tyson asked Stephen Hawking to share his thoughts on what happened before the big bang -- or the beginning of the universe.
A Brief History of Time is a 1991 biographical documentary film about the physicist Stephen Hawking, directed by Errol Morris. [2] The title derives from Hawking's bestselling 1988 book A Brief History of Time, but, whereas the book is solely an explanation of cosmology, the film is also a biography of Hawking, featuring interviews with some of his family members and colleagues.
Stephen Hawking submitted his final scientific paper just two weeks before he died, and it lays the groundwork for discovering a parallel universe.
45 Stephen Hawking Quotes. 1. “Life would be tragic if it weren’t funny.” 2. “It would not be much of a universe if it wasn’t home to the people you love.”
Hawking then discusses three "arrows of time" which, in his view, give time this property. Hawking's first arrow of time is the thermodynamic arrow of time: the direction in which entropy (which Hawking calls disorder) increases. According to Hawking, this is why we never see the broken pieces of a cup gather themselves together to form a whole ...
[6] In the acknowledgments of the first edition of A Brief History of Time, Stephen Hawking writes that prior to his book "There were already a considerable number of books about the early universe and black holes, ranging from the very good, such as Steven Weinberg's book, The First Three Minutes, to the very bad, which I will not identify."