Advanced Content Search
»My Wallet  »View Cart
Resources
Blank
» Home
Blank
» What's New
Blank
» eBook of the Month
Blank
» Browse by Subject
Blank
» Audio
Blank
» Download Centre
Blank
» eBooks for Libraries
Blank
» eBook Formats
Blank
» Help
Blank
» T&F Home
Blank
» Contact Us
Blank
» Help Desk
Blank
» SPON Download Centre
Blank
» Change Country
Blank

Your Country:-
United States

Blank
DPSL

Humanities || Philosophy

Bohm-Biederman Correspondence -Creativity and Science

Author: David Bohm, Charles Biederman

Editor : Paavo Pylkkanen

Illustrations : 6 b+w photos

Master eBook ISBN10 : 0-203-00803-0

Master eBook ISBN13 : 978-0-203-00803-4

No of pages : 288

eBook Price : $100

Originally Published : 3 Dec 1998

"It was sheer chance that I encountered David Bohm's writing in 1958 ... I knew nothing about him. What struck me about his work and prompted my initial letter was his underlying effort to seek for some larger sense of reality, which seemed a very humanized search." - Charles Biederman, from the foreword of the book
This book marks the beginning of a four thousand page correspondence between Charles Biederman, founder of Constructivism in the 1930s, and David Bohm the prestigious physicist known for his interpretation of quantum theory. Available for the first time, we are given a rare opportunity to read through and engage in a remarkable transatlantic, intellectual discussion on art and science, creativity and theory.



Order an electronic Inspection Copy


Buy Printed Book

All Mobipocket & Microsoft eBooks are copy and print disabled. Adobe eBooks can be printed but not copied.

Click on an eBook format to add to cart.

Read about the eBook Formats.Buy Printed Book.

Quotes

''The Correspondence is a rich and extremely rigorous enquiry by two creator-thinkers into the range and the means of this enquiry, and is of the utmost importance for artists, philosophers and scientists alike.'' - The Art Book

''This is a fascinating and open, sometimes demanding, dialogue on the nature of creativity, on art and science ... between two thinkers who believed in venturing outside the main currents of contemporary thinking.'' - The Globe and Mail

Top