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Stephen Hawking and The Theory of Everything

A mind-expanding view of the big picture

7.62009

Twenty years after A Brief History of Time flummoxed the world with its big numbers and black holes, its author, Stephen Hawking, concedes that the "ultimate theory" he'd believed to be imminent - which would conclusively explain the origins of life, the universe and everything - remains frustratingly elusive. Yet despite his failing health and the seeming impossibility of the task, Hawking is still devoted to his work; an extraordinary drive that's captured here in fleeting interview snippets and footage of the scientist sharing a microwave dinner with some fawning PhD students. Though the pop-science tutorials that dapple the first of this two-part biography are winningly perky, Hawking, alas, remains as tricky to fathom as his boggling quantum whatnots

Grotte Chauvet - Dans les pas des artistes de la Préhistoire
The Half-Life of Genius Physicist Raemer Schreiber
L'affaire Jeanne d'Arc
Solar Weather: Dr. Alessandra Pacini
Shark Beach with Chris Hemsworth
Ionosphere: Dr. Eliana Nossa
CERN, or The Factory for the Absolute
Physics at Half Past Nine
The Lucy Mission: Origins of the Solar System
Tukdam – Between Worlds
Breaking Boundaries: The Science of Our Planet
A Trip to Infinity
A Brief History of Time
Cosmic Voyage
Swimming with Legends
The Nobles of Prehistory: Ladies and Princes of the Paleolithic
Secrets of the Neanderthals
League of Denial: The NFL’s Concussion Crisis
The Conquest of Light
The Revelation of the Pyramids