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![]() | Seeing the Light: Optics in Nature, Photography, Color, Vision, and Holography by David R. Falk, Dieter R. Brill, David G. Stork ISBN-10: 9780471603856 ISBN-10: 0-471-60385-6 ISBN-13: 9780471603856 ISBN-13: 978-0-471-60385-6 Hardcover 1986-11-01 Wiley Find Lowest Price | |
Editorials | ||
Product Description The most complete and lucid nonmathematical study of light available. Chapters are self-contained, making the book flexible and easy to read. Coverage includes such non-traditional topics as processes of vision and the eye, atmospherical optical phenomena, color perception and illusions, color in nature and in art, Kirilian photography, and holography. Includes experiments that can be carried out with simple equipment. Chapters contain optional advanced sections, and appendixes review the mathematics for quantitative aspects. Illustrated, including a four-color insert. | ||
Reviews | ||
Outstanding conceptual approach to optics One of the best science textbooks I've ever read. Clearly written and interesting to read. Heavy on concepts, light on math. Diagrams are simple but effective. It's rare to see a physics book as approachable as this one. As an amateur photographer and research microscopist, I love this book. Some parts of the text are a bit outdated (remember it was published in 1986), but the vast majority is valuable information. This is a great tool for physics students and teachers. | ||
Very good The book arrived quickly and in the condition that was specified. No issues, would use this seller again. | ||
Optometry was never ever so interesting Particularly for a budding Optometrist, this book allows the Optometrist to be acquainted with all the fine arts of optics and the like. | ||
Seeing the Light Book arrived in great shape. Like new!! | ||
most missed book This is the best textbook I ever had, and I sold it for some ($$$) at the end of a semester to buy a bus ticket. Very mad; I miss the book, but it's so expensive. It's amazing the way the author incorporates all sorts of literary allusions in this physics book, such as offering an interesting hypothesis on the optical illusion of the egyptians getting swallowed by the red sea while chasing the jews. Every chapter, light becomes a metaphor for so many things, the way we see, the obstacles, etc. | ||