Challenge of Nexar – Atari 2600
Includes original Atari 2600 cartridge only in good used condition. Like all our games this item has been cleaned, tested, guaranteed to work, and backed by our 120 day warranty.
———This game is fully cleaned, tested & working. Includes the Disc/Cartridge Only. May have some minor scratches/scuffs.This description was last updated on October 28th, 2020.
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CHALLENGE OF NEXAR – Atari 2600 Game
$47.04 $28.78
In stock
Condition:Used
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Related product
SKU: 4808594784279
Category: Atari 2600
Tags: atari2600, ESRB Rating_Unrated/Unlisted, game, Genre_Other/Unlisted, notbestseller, previous, Price_$20 to $40, Product Type_Game, verylow
science and literature make this informative and worth rereading.I have found this fascinating.
An exquisite reflection on the history of creation(big bang/ religious beliefs), life in flux, and everything in between. Alan artfully retells the history of scientists and religious leaders alike and how their views have shaped the world we know and how we interpret it. What does it mean to be human? Is there anything constant in the universe? Will we ever know how the universe was created? (no , but we can keep trying!) What’s the meaning behind all of this “life stuff� these questions and more, intertwined with quaint reflections and observations from his isolated island in Maine, much like we are the universe, perhaps. I would give it 5 stars but aim trying my best to not give everything I read 5 stars, but I’d argue it’s because I mange sure a book is worth reading before reading-but that’s just me.
Alan Lightman takes readers through Quantum Theory and philosophical thought as he explores ideas and humanity. I loved the way he made complex ideas understandable, and as a former resident of Maine, I enjoyed exploring his island with hi .
Searching for stars on an island in Maine byLightman_ Alan PEnjoyed listening to this book because of the area and also other certain chapters of things we treasure in our lives.I received this book from National Library Service for my BARD (Braille Audio Reading Device).
This book is a very readable intersection of philosophy, science and religion. It contains scholarly elements but they are not overbearing. The author keeps tying his examination of the origins of the universe and the meaning of life back to real people and situations. I can’t wait to read more of his works.
The meaning of life, the afterlife, God, spirituality, science, the universe, brain neurons, human life, and much more. This is a lovely book—great as a gift—for a quiet thoughtful read. Alan Lightman has all the credentials and sensitivity to collect his thoughts into a journey of the mind and heart, the body and the universe, God and man. Lute Island sounds perfect for his musings. This is the kind of book that you can open up at random and choose a page that will catch you and you’ll have to continue reading page after page. Lightman is a materialist and holds firm on basing his beliefs on evidence but keeps the doors open to the transcendent. He says about transcendence that “the experience I had looking up at the stars off the coast of Maine was a transcendent experience. I’ve had others.†He explains it as “an avenue to truth that is a deeply human path.†I closed the book thinking about reality and spirituality. Being at one with the physical world and being at one with the spiritual world. I don’t think anyone can read this book and not discover the validity of the spiritual world embedded in our physical world. Bravo, Mr. Lightman. I read this book via my public library.
interesting book
Great book!
Little here is likely to surprise any reasonably serious reader of popular science, but Lightman’s delightful musings about meaning and wonder in our nearly impenetrable universe somehow capture what makes life worth living. Or, short of that, they leave one feeling these few hours were time well spent.
Alan Lightman, a theoretical physicist and writer, begins "Searching for Stars on an Island in Maine" with a brief chapter on seeing 17,000-year-old cave paintings, and follows with his mystical experience while contemplating the stars on Maine’s Lute Island.Those two themes twine and twine again throughout this brief, wonderfully written book that ponders some of philosophy’s most basic questions — without, of course, being able to come to any definitive conclusions.The experience in the cave takes Lightman back to the human artists who are completely unknown to us, just as we will be completely unknown to people 17,000 years in the future. We may find some meaning in those cave paintings today, but what meaning the artists intended, and any hint about their thoughts, feelings, identity and aspirations, are lost in the deep fog of time. Similarly, of course, our lives will disappear under the weight of millennia, and what matters so much to us now will be irrelevant in the blink of a geologic eye.That being so, what is it that gives meaning to our lives? Why should we strive if all is eventually, and perhaps almost immediately, meaningless?That brings Lightman to his other main point — the search for the Absolute (his capitalization) and certainty, some of which can be found in mystical experiences. These deeply moving and powerful trance-like states lie at the heart of every religion and belief about the connectedness of the universe, and apparently (as I have nev.