This book, in its three editions spanning half a century, is one of the great textbooks of our time....It offers a compelling account of the development of the modern world view and a richly rewarding look at the place of physics in the Western intellectual tradition. It is a grand thing to have the new edition available.
(Physics Today) The fact that this book is still going strong a half-century after its first appearance is some testimony to its effectiveness as a teaching text.
(Meta Science) Primarily a student text, [the book] is monumental in its approach, weighing in at 582 pages...but within, it has a lightness of touch that would calm and reassure the most nervous of students. It divides the material into friendly, bite-sized sections and chapters, with a two column per page format liberally sprinkled with portraits of famous scientists, that exudes the feeling of a cozy armchair narrative. But this book is no walk in the park. As its title suggests it is an adventure, and the authors, rightly in my view, make no compromise in their treatment of the material, save in their effort to communicate accurately, lucidly and thoughtfully. It is this latter characteristic which marks out this book from the herd.
(Pantaneto Forum) Intended for a full-year course, this volume contains about 375,000 words and (one more statistic) its index contains about 400 people's names....Finally, teachers and students will have to decide how much of this panoply to treat as dinner and how much as dinner music.
(Choice) This is the book that I should have had all the way from secondary school physics to my professional university physics teaching. It is a unique presentation of physics within the context of its historical foundations and it does so in accessible, authoritative, and interesting fashion; all other sciences should be so well served.
- D. Allan Bromley (Sterling Professor of the Sciences, Yale University and former President's Science Advisor) Read Holton and Brush to see that there is just one culture, with science playing an integral role.
- Sheldon L. Glashow (Nobel laureate, Boston University) A lucid exposition of the great concepts of physics, embedded in an exhilarating account of the lives and times of their discoverers.
- Daniel Kleppner (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)