I heartily recommend this book. For those familiar with the subjects treated, it is good bedtime reading. For the interested nonspecialist, it offers an understanding of what physics is all about. This book is not only illuminating but also entertaining. It is embellished throughout by illustrations, examples of correspondence between scientists, and anecdotes. Each chapter is given a hero: Pascal, Rumford, Mendeleev, Boltzmann, Darwin, Planck, Einstein, Eddington. These serve to show how important a love of science for its own sake is to genuine progress in understanding ... If you have not been waiting for this book, you should have been, and if you have not read it yet, you should.
-American Journal of Physics 68 (10), October 2000
I recommend the volume strongly for technical professionals at all levels.
-Jag J. Singh, NASA Langley Research Center, Virginia, USA
I recommend it as a well-written treatise of the state of modern physics.
-B.C. Sanders, Macquarie University
Landsberg makes a persuasive case that cosmological theories are models and should be treated as such, and he shows that very interesting questions and issues do emerge when we juxtapose the various cosmological models as live possibilities.
-Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics, 33
... those already knowledgeable in physics will enjoy a sparkly treatment of many things that they already know, and may be able to learn some things that they did not know before.
-Hasok Chang, Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics, 33
This book has remarkable breadth, dealing with physics as a human activity of wide interest and summarizing much of what we know about physics and its broader implications ... Landsberg's exploration of the limits of scientific knowledge, written for a general audience, is interesting. He points to the gaps in our knowledge and asks what we can learn from them.
-William E. Evenson, History of Physics Newsletter, Vol. VIII, No. 3
Landsberg is a charismatic Professor Emeritus at Southampton University in the UK, and has an impressive command of the subjects presented in his book. Through prose, anecdotes, and imaginative illustrations, his personality shines through and adds to the text a lively cadence. Seeking Ultimates is filled with anecdotes that serve to enlighten while at the same time providing a sense of perspective to those responsible for shaping the course of modern physics. Landsberg's approach will be illuminating for the scientist as well, and for that reason this book is highly recommended to the technical community as a whole.
-R. Scheps, Progress in Quantum Electronics, 28 (2004) 247-248
... it is splendid to see the whole field of physics presented in one short volume by an author knowledgeable about it all. What makes it particularly attractive is that the historical background is described showing the persons and events through which we came to our current understanding. And all this done without mathematics! ... thinking is certainly required, but in a pleasurable ... way.
-Sir Hermann Bondi, Cambridge University, UK