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Science and Ultimate Reality: Quantum Theory, Cosmology, and Complexity 1st Edition
- ISBN-10052183113X
- ISBN-13978-0521831130
- Edition1st
- PublisherCambridge University Press
- Publication dateJune 7, 2004
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions7.25 x 1.5 x 9.75 inches
- Print length742 pages
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"This is theoretical physics at its best."
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- Publisher : Cambridge University Press; 1st edition (June 7, 2004)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 742 pages
- ISBN-10 : 052183113X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0521831130
- Item Weight : 3.62 pounds
- Dimensions : 7.25 x 1.5 x 9.75 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,661,432 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,440 in Mathematical Physics (Books)
- #2,293 in Cosmology (Books)
- #2,356 in Quantum Theory (Books)
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One of Wheeler's ideas was geometrodynamics, in which the entire universe consisted of curved space-time. This led to some colorful comments by Wheeler, such as "Mass without Mass" and "Charge without Charge" (as well some replies such as "Equations without Solutions" and "Theories without Content"). Was there really no matter in the universe? Or didn't it really matter? In any case, the failure of geometrodynamics to explain the existence of fermions or of gravitational singularities eventually got Wheeler to abandon this idea.
Richard Feynman said that Wheeler once told him a possible explanation of why all electrons had the same mass and charge. It was because they were all the same electron! That very busy electron would travel backwards and forwards in time and show up all over the place! Feynman, not surprisingly, asked where the time-reversed electrons (namely, the positrons) would be, leaving Wheeler to wonder if they could be hidden in the nuclei somehow. Still, the idea of the time-reversed electrons became the core of the Feynman diagrams which are used in quantum electrodynamics.
Many people have been inspired by Wheeler's advice, including comments such as "Never make a calculation until you know the answer." That is, you have to make an estimate or at least a guess before you really get started on a derivation. In addition, he's often asked fundamental questions, including "How come existence?" and "How come the quantum?"
A book called "Magic without Magic" honored Wheeler's sixtieth birthday. This book honors Wheeler's ninetieth birthday. It includes papers on quantum reality, cosmology, and other favorite topics of his. Many of the papers are, um, highly speculative, but they are on exciting topics and I feel they are all worthwhile and, of course, appropriate.
As far as quantum reality is concerned, Wheeler and I may have, um, slightly different perspectives. Wheeler, after all, studied with Bohr. I am convinced that quantum mechanics is (and should be considered to be) a local theory, in which measurement plays no fundamental role. That's not quite what we see in some of the papers in this volume.
Lucien Hardy has a fine paper on why nature is described by quantum theory, in which he discusses the issue of continuity versus discreteness. It reminded me of Paul Dirac's book on quantum mechanics, in which Dirac said that the need for quantum mechanics could be seen from general philosophical principles: without it there would never be a point where we could deal with an ultimate structure of matter as size would always be relative. In his paper, Freeman Dyson tells us that "everything in the future is a wave, everything in the past is a particle." David Deutsch says that while it does no good to hypothesize that the world is "made of information," it can be made of qubits, which are "unequivocally multiversal objects." And there are many other fine papers on quantum reality, including those by Dieter Zeh, Wojciech Zurek, Juan Paz, Juan Maldacena, Bryce DeWitt (on the Everett many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics).
The cosmology papers are simply wild. John Barrow wonders about yet another big question: are our constants constant? It reminds me of when Paul Dirac looked at whether the gravitational constant might be getting smaller with time, only to have Edward Teller point out that it couldn't be getting smaller too fast, or the Sun would have been too luminous for the dinosaurs to have existed. Maybe the most speculative of these papers is Max Tegmark's, on parallel universes, and I do think this paper could, um, use much more work.
I truly enjoyed this fine book and all the papers in it.
(1) To my knowledge, loop quantum gravity (and the allied spin foam model) has delivered as much as string theory has delivered in terms of experimentally verifiable data, that is, nothing. Fotini Markopoulou writes: "... experiments are necessary." (page 561). Smolin writes: "...the better we understand the laws of physics, the less the space that will be required to write them." (page 492). That is a vacuous comment.
(2) As pointed out by others, the essay by Max Tegmark is of dubious value. He concludes: "...the simplest and arguably most elegant theory involves parallel universes by default." (page 490). That is a pet peeve of mine, physicists should cease using terms such as "simplest" and "most elegant."
(3) Lisa Randall writes a brief, lucid, account of "additional spatial dimensions." John Barrow writes: "if the constants of nature are slowly changing then we could be on a one-way slide to extinction." (page 419).
(4) In my view, the best essay in this volume is Raymond Chiao's "Conceptual Tension Between Quantum Mechanics and General Relativity, Are There Experimental Consequences ?" He concludes: "I suspect that there might exist superconductors which are transducers between electromagnetic and gravitational waves..." (page 276).
(5) Of the "young researchers competition" winners (Appendix B) only two of them have I followed with any zeal: Raphael Bousso and Steven Gubser. Among those fifteen names, one of those has departed the field of physics and Steven Gubser lost his life tragically in 2019.
(6) Now, instead of this volume, I recommend two other conference volumes: Fundamental Problems in Quantum Theory (1995 Conference in honor of Wheeler) and Complexity, Entropy and the Physics of Information (1990, edited by Zurek).
