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Invisible

The Dangerous Allure of the Unseen

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

If you could be invisible, what would you do? The chances are that it would have something to do with power, wealth or sex. Perhaps all three.
But there's no need to feel guilty. Impulses like these have always been at the heart of our fascination with invisibility: it points to realms beyond our senses, serves as a receptacle for fears and dreams, and hints at worlds where other rules apply. Invisibility is a mighty power and a terrible curse, a sexual promise, a spiritual condition.
This is a history of humanity's turbulent relationship with the invisible. It takes on the myths and morals of Plato, the occult obsessions of the Middle Ages, the trickeries and illusions of stage magic, the auras and ethers of Victorian physics, military strategies to camouflage armies and ships and the discovery of invisibly small worlds.
From the medieval to the cutting-edge, fairy tales to telecommunications, from beliefs about the supernatural to the discovery of dark energy, Philip Ball reveals the universe of the invisible.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from February 9, 2015
      English science writer Ball (Serving the Reich) leads readers on a fascinating whirlwind tour of the history of the idea of the invisible. He examines both the why and the how of invisibility, pondering the concept’s allure and the opportunity it gives individuals to seize “power, wealth, or sex,” as well as the intriguing ways that myth, magic, and science intersect in its study. In the Middle Ages, magic books were “scarcely complete without a spell of invisibility,” but scientists began to test such spells experimentally by the 18th Century. Belief in invisible forces continued thanks in part to German physician Franz Mesmer’s claimed ability to harness “animal magnetism.” As the 19th century closed, scientists had discovered invisible forms of electromagnetic radiation, such as X-rays, that could make the unseen visible, yet such phenomena also gave rise to the “para-physics of telepathy and telekinesis.” Ball also discusses modern optical manipulation through camouflage, in which invisibility becomes less an “inability to see so much as an inability to distinguish.” It’s a tour-de-force history, capped off with an animated discussion of H.G. Wells’s novel The Invisible Man, as Ball observes that Wells illustrated not only the power and the curse of invisibility, but science’s failure to harness its power productively.

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  • OverDrive Read
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Languages

  • English

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