Mention About Books A Fórmula de Deus (Tomás Noronha #2)
Title | : | A Fórmula de Deus (Tomás Noronha #2) |
Author | : | José Rodrigues dos Santos |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Large edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 574 pages |
Published | : | 2006 by Gradiva |
Categories | : | Fiction. Thriller. Romance. European Literature. Portuguese Literature. Mystery |

José Rodrigues dos Santos
Paperback | Pages: 574 pages Rating: 3.91 | 7249 Users | 428 Reviews
Chronicle Conducive To Books A Fórmula de Deus (Tomás Noronha #2)
"Nas escadarias do Museu Egípcio, em pleno Cairo, Tomás Noronha é abordado por uma desconhecida. Chama-se Ariana Pakravan, é iraniana e traz consigo a cópia de um documento inédito, um velho manuscrito com um estranho título e um poema enigmático.O inesperado encontro lança Tomás numa empolgante aventura, colocando-o na rota da crise nuclear com o Irão e da mais importante descoberta jamais efectuada por Albert Einstein, um achado que o conduz ao maior de todos os mistérios. A prova científica da existência de Deus.
Uma história de amor, uma intriga de traição, uma perseguição implacável, uma busca espiritual que nos leva à mais espantosa revelação mística de todos os tempos.
Baseada nas últimas e mais avançadas descobertas científicas nos campos da física, da cosmologia e da matemática, A Fórmula de Deus transporta-nos numa surpreendente viagem até às origens do tempo, à essência do universo e ao sentido da vida."
Itemize Books Supposing A Fórmula de Deus (Tomás Noronha #2)
Original Title: | A Fórmula de Deus ISBN13 9789896161392 |
Edition Language: | Portuguese |
Series: | Tomás Noronha #2 |
Characters: | Tomás Noronha |
Setting: | Portugal |
Rating About Books A Fórmula de Deus (Tomás Noronha #2)
Ratings: 3.91 From 7249 Users | 428 ReviewsDiscuss About Books A Fórmula de Deus (Tomás Noronha #2)
I loved the book, but I had to read it 3 times because I love Physics but some concepts I find hard to understand. So in between readings I fed my brain with some documentaries about the themes and finnaly, at attempt 3, I understood it.That's my biggest critic. It's not easy to understand for people who don't have some basic knowledge of the topics.thoses conversations between Tomàs and his father are epic 👌👌
DNFed at 50%It's jst all information (that i already knew) it was more of an encyclopedia and the caracters are poorly developed.Jst wasnt for me

Liked this book a lot. Felt it was very "smart" or maybe it just made me feel smarter after I read it. Also made me think deeply about the universe in ways I haven't thought about it awhile. I would recommend this book not for it's literary style but for its content. I liked how the author wove the story between fact and fiction and blurred the line quite seamlessly.
Second read:This is still a very nice book.Not really exciting, but very interesting. I do not know whether I have understood everything after rereading, but I understood more than the first time. Whether I could explain what the (scientific part) of the book is about? I don't think so, to do that I would have to be less of a language person and have better & more knowledge of the exact subjects than the rudimentary it is in now :-)Recommended for the reader who likes a book to think about,
A good book I liked the way he insert philosophy and science in a roman, but I waited for something much stronger more credible and I waited for a real formula.Beside the argumentation is based on an egocentric vision on the existing of humanity like if we are sure that we are the only intelligence in the universe, and the ultimate form of it.The argument is forced to meet his point of view, after all he did not prove the intention of the creation. Everything he presented is an hypothesis
Very good popular science, very ambitious, but is that really what we seek, even not to sunbathe idiot? From the theory of relativity to the quantum indeterminacy through chaos theory and the ropes (for the latter, it remains a bit on its Excuse hunger for the bit) without speaking of self-referential paradoxes and oriental philosophies ... An universal knowledge, a great light show and a willingness to cohesion leading to the proposal of a cyclical universe. Woof!The properly romantic part does
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