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The Hidden Reality: Parallel Universes and the Deep Laws of the Cosmos Paperback – Illustrated, November 1, 2011
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The bestselling author of The Elegant Universe and The Fabric of the Cosmos tackles perhaps the most mind-bending question in modern physics and cosmology: Is our universe the only universe?
There was a time when "universe" meant all there is. Everything. Yet, a number of theories are converging on the possibility that our universe may be but one among many parallel universes populating a vast multiverse. Here, Briane Greene, one of our foremost physicists and science writers, takes us on a breathtaking journey to a multiverse comprising an endless series of big bangs, a multiverse with duplicates of every one of us, a multiverse populated by vast sheets of spacetime, a multiverse in which all we consider real are holographic illusions, and even a multiverse made purely of math--and reveals the reality hidden within each.
Using his trademark wit and precision, Greene presents a thrilling survey of cutting-edge physics and confronts the inevitable question: How can fundamental science progress if great swaths of reality lie beyond our reach? The Hidden Reality is a remarkable adventure through a world more vast and strange than anything we could have imagined.
- Print length443 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherVintage
- Publication dateNovember 1, 2011
- Dimensions8.04 x 5.29 x 0.93 inches
- ISBN-100307278123
- ISBN-13978-0307278128
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“Brian Greene has a gift for elucidating big ideas. . . Captures and engages the imagination. . . . It’s exciting and rewarding to read him.” —The New York Times
“A wonderful way to coax your brain into a host of strange and unfamiliar domains.” —The Boston Globe
“Exciting physics, wrapped up in effortless prose. . . . Greene has done it again.” —New Scientist
“If extraterrestrials landed tomorrow and demanded to know what the human mind is capable of accomplishing, we could do worse than to hand them a copy of this book.” —The New York Times Book Review
“The multiverse is an idea whose time has come. . . . The book serves well as an introduction . . . and will open up many people’s eyes.” —The Wall Street Journal
“Greene takes us down the rabbit hole yet again, this time setting a course for the terra incognita of parallel universes, hidden worlds, alternate realities, holographic projections, and multiverse simulations. Greene likes to drop you into the middle of the action first and then explain the backstory, but he has an elegant knack for anticipating questions and immediately dealing with any confusion or objections.” —The Daily Beast
“An accessible and surprisingly witty handbook to parallel universes…. Greene is immensely gifted at finding apt and colorful everyday analogies for the arcane byways of theoretical physics.” —The Toronto Star
“Mind-stretching. . . . [The Hidden Reality is] Greene’s impassioned argument ‘for the capacity of mathematics to reveal hidden truths about the workings of the world.’” —The New Yorker
“Like [Stephen] Hawking and [Roger] Penrose before him, [Greene] is an author who writes with the confidence and authority of one who . . . has seen the promised land of cosmic truth.” —Bookforum
“If you like your science explained rather than asserted, if you like your science writers articulate and intelligible, if you like popular science to make sense, even as it probes the heart of difficult theory, you are going to love The Hidden Reality and its author, Brian Greene.” —New York Journal of Books
“Greene’s forte is his amazing ability to give clear, everyday examples to illustrate complicated physical theories.” —The Globe and Mail
“Ambitious. . . . Entertaining and well-written. . . . Greene is a keen interpreter.” —The Christian Science Monitor
“A lucid, intriguing, and triumphantly understandable state-of-the-art look at the universe.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“With a slew of clever analogies, Greene communicates with uncommon clarity, intuition, and honesty.” —The Oxonian Review
“Greene’s success at explaining the patently inexplicable lies in the way he delightfully melds the utterly bizarre and the utterly familiar.” —Providence Journal
“Exotic cosmic terrain through which Greene provides expert guidance.” —The Oregonian
“Mind-blowing.” —The Sunday Times (London)
“Highly rewarding.” —Scotland on Sunday
“[Greene] has something fresh and insightful to say about pretty much everything”—ScienceFiction.com
“Vast, energetic and complex.” —The Easthampton Star
“The best guide available, in this universe at least.”—Science News
“Greene’s greatest achievement is that even as you grapple with these allusive concepts, you start falling in love with these mysteries.” —The Express Tribune
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The Bounds of Reality
On Parallel Worlds
If, when I was growing up, my room had been adorned with only a single mirror, my childhood daydreams might have been very different. But it had two. And each morning when I opened the closet to get my clothes, the one built into its door aligned with the one on the wall, creating a seemingly endless series of reflections of anything situated between them. It was mesmerizing. I delighted in seeing image after image populating the parallel glass planes, extending back as far as the eye could discern. All the reflections seemed to move in unison—but that, I knew, was a mere limitation of human perception; at a young age I had learned of light’s finite speed. So in my mind’s eye, I would watch the light’s round-trip journeys. The bob of my head, the sweep of my arm silently echoed between the mirrors, each reflected image nudging the next. Sometimes I would imagine an irreverent me way down the line who refused to fall into place, disrupting the steady progression and creating a new reality that informed the ones that followed. During lulls at school, I would sometimes think about the light I had shed that morning, still endlessly bouncing between the mirrors, and I’d join one of my reflected selves, entering an imaginary parallel world constructed of light and driven by fantasy. It was a safe way to break the rules.
To be sure, reflected images don’t have minds of their own. But these youthful flights of fancy, with their imagined parallel realities, resonate with an increasingly prominent theme in modern science—the possibility of worlds lying beyond the one we know. This book is an exploration of such possibilities, a considered journey through the science of parallel universes.
Universe and Universes
There was a time when “universe” meant “all there is.” Everything. The whole shebang. The notion of more than one universe, more than one everything, would seemingly be a contradiction in terms. Yet a range of theoretical developments has gradually qualified the interpretation of “universe.” To a physicist, the word’s meaning now largely depends on context. Sometimes “universe” still connotes absolutely everything. Sometimes it refers only to those parts of everything that someone such as you or I could, in principle, have access to. Sometimes it’s applied to separate realms, ones that are partly or fully, temporarily or permanently, inaccessible to us; in this sense, the word relegates ours to membership in a large, perhaps infinitely large, collection.
With its hegemony diminished, “universe” has given way to other terms introduced to capture the wider canvas on which the totality of reality may be painted. Parallel worlds or parallel universes or multiple universes or alternate universes or the metaverse, megaverse, or multiverse—they’re all synonymous and they’re all among the words used to embrace not just our universe but a spectrum of others that may be out there.
You’ll notice that the terms are somewhat vague. What exactly constitutes a world or a universe? What criteria distinguish realms that are distinct parts of a single universe from those classified as universes of their own? Perhaps someday our understanding of multiple universes will mature sufficiently for us to have precise answers to these questions. For now, we’ll use the approach famously applied by Justice Potter Stewart in attempting to define pornography. While the U.S. Supreme Court wrestled mightily to delineate a standard, Stewart declared simply and forthrightly, “I know it when I see it.”
In the end, labeling one realm or another a parallel universe is merely a question of language. What matters, what’s at the heart of the subject, is whether there exist realms that challenge convention by suggesting that what we’ve long thought to be the universe is only one component of a far grander, perhaps far stranger, and mostly hidden reality.
During the last half century, science has provided ample ways in which this possibility might be realized.
Varieties of Parallel Universes
A striking fact (it’s in part what propelled me to write this book) is that many of the major developments in fundamental theoretical physics— relativistic physics, quantum physics, cosmological physics, unified physics, computational physics—have led us to consider one or another variety of parallel universe. Indeed, the chapters that follow trace a narrative arc through nine variations on the multiverse theme. Each envisions our universe as part of an unexpectedly larger whole, but the complexion of that whole and the nature of the member universes differ sharply among them. In some, the parallel universes are separated from us by enormous stretches of space or time; in others, they’re hovering millimeters away; in others still, the very notion of their location proves parochial, devoid of meaning. A similar range of possibility is manifest in the laws governing the parallel universes. In some, the laws are the same as in ours; in others, they appear different but have shared a heritage; in others still, the laws are of a form and structure unlike anything we’ve ever encountered. It’s at once humbling and stirring to imagine just how expansive reality may be.
Some of the earliest scientific forays into parallel worlds were initiated in the 1950s by researchers puzzling over aspects of quantum mechanics, a theory developed to explain phenomena taking place in the microscopic realm of atoms and subatomic particles. Quantum mechanics broke the mold of the previous framework, classical mechanics, by establishing that the predictions of science are necessarily probabilistic. We can predict the odds of attaining one outcome, we can predict the odds of another, but we generally can’t predict which will actually happen. This well-known departure from hundreds of years of scientific thought is surprising enough. But there’s a more confounding aspect of quantum theory that receives less attention. After decades of closely studying quantum mechanics, and after having accumulated a wealth of data confirming its probabilistic predictions, no one has been able to explain why only one of the many possible outcomes in any given situation actually happens. When we do experiments, when we examine the world, we all agree that we encounter a single definite reality. Yet, more than a century after the quantum revolution began, there is no consensus among the world’s physicists as to how this basic fact is compatible with the theory’s mathematical expression.
Over the years, this substantial gap in understanding has inspired many creative proposals, but the most startling was among the first. Maybe, that early suggestion went, the familiar notion that any given experiment has one and only one outcome is flawed. The mathematics underlying quantum mechanics—or at least, one perspective on the math— suggests that all possible outcomes happen, each inhabiting its own separate universe. If a quantum calculation predicts that a particle might be here, or it might be there, then in one universe it is here, and in another it is there. And in each such universe, there’s a copy of you witnessing one or the other outcome, thinking—incorrectly—that your reality is the only reality. When you realize that quantum mechanics underlies all physical processes, from the fusing of atoms in the sun to the neural firing that constitutes the stuff of thought, the far-reaching implications of the proposal become apparent. It says that there’s no such thing as a road untraveled. Yet each such road— each reality—is hidden from all others.
This tantalizing Many Worlds approach to quantum mechanics has attracted much interest in recent decades. But investigations have shown that it’s a subtle and thorny framework (as we will discuss in Chapter 8); so, even today, after more than half a century of vetting, the proposal remains controversial. Some quantum practitioners argue that it has already been proven correct, while others claim just as assuredly that the mathematical underpinnings don’t hold together.
What is beyond doubt is that this early version of parallel universes resonated with themes of separate lands or alternative histories that were being explored in literature, television, and film, creative forays that continue today. (My favorites since childhood include The Wizard of Oz, It’s a Wonderful Life, the Star Trek episode “The City on the Edge of Forever,” and, more recently, Sliding Doors and Run Lola Run). Collectively, these and many other works of popular culture have helped integrate the concept of parallel realities into the zeitgeist and are responsible for fueling much public fascination with the topic. But the mathematics of quantum mechanics is only one of numerous ways that a conception of parallel universes emerges from modern physics. In fact, it won’t be the first I’ll discuss.
Instead, in Chapter 2, I’ll begin with a different route to parallel universes, perhaps the simplest route of all. We’ll see that if space extends infinitely far—a proposition that is consistent with all observations and that is part of the cosmological model favored by many physicists and astronomers—then there must be realms out there (likely way out there) where copies of you and me and everything else are enjoying alternate versions of the reality we experience here. Chapter 3 will journey deeper into cosmology: the inflationary theory, an approach that posits an enormous burst of superfast spatial expansion during the universe’s earliest moments, generates its own version of parallel worlds. If inflation is correct, as the most refined astronomical observations suggest, the burst that created our region of space may not have been unique. Instead, right now, inflationary expansion in distant realms may be spawning universe upon universe and may continue to do so for all eternity. What’s more, each of these ballooning universes has its own infinite spatial expanse, and hence contains infinitely many of the parallel worlds explored in Chapter 2.
In Chapter 4, our trek turns to string theory. After a brief review of the basics, I’ll provide a status report on this approach to unifying all of nature’s laws. With that overview, in Chapters 5 and 6 we’ll explore recent developments in string theory that suggest three new kinds of parallel universes. One is string theory’s braneworld scenario, which posits that our universe is one of potentially numerous “slabs” floating in a higher-dimensional space, much like a slice of bread within a grander cosmic loaf. If we’re lucky, it’s an approach that may provide an observable signature at the Large Hadron Collider in Geneva, Switzerland, in the not too distant future. A second variety involves braneworlds that slam into one another, wiping away all they contain and initiating a new, fiery big-bang-like beginning in each. As if two giant hands were clapping, this could happen over and over—branes might collide, bounce apart, attract each other gravitationally, and then collide again, a cyclic process generating universes that are parallel not in space but in time. The third scenario is the string theory “landscape,” founded on the enormous number of possible shapes and sizes for the theory’s required extra spatial dimensions. We’ll see that, when joined with the Inflationary Multiverse, the string landscape suggests a vast collection of universes in which every possible form for the extra dimensions is realized.
In Chapter 6, we’ll focus on how these considerations illuminate one of the most surprising observational results of the last century: space appears to be filled with a uniform diffuse energy, which may well be a version of Einstein’s infamous cosmological constant. Indeed, this observation has inspired much of the recent research on parallel universes, and it’s responsible for one of the most heated debates in decades on the nature of acceptable scientific explanations. Chapter 7 extends this theme by asking, more generally, whether consideration of hidden universes beyond our own can be rightly understood as a branch of science. Can we test these ideas? If we invoke them to solve outstanding problems, have we made progress, or have we merely swept the problems under a conveniently inaccessible cosmic rug? I’ve sought to lay bare the essentials of the clashing perspectives, while ultimately emphasizing my own view that, under certain specific conditions, parallel universes fall unequivocally within the purview of science.
Quantum mechanics, with its Many Worlds version of parallel universes, is the subject of Chapter 8. I’ll briefly remind you of the essential features of quantum mechanics, then focus on the formidable problem just referred to: how to extract definite outcomes from a theory whose basic paradigm allows for mutually contradictory realities to coexist in an amorphous, but mathematically precise, probabilistic haze. I’ll carefully lead you through the reasoning that, in seeking an answer, proposes anchoring quantum reality in its own profusion of parallel worlds.
Chapter 9 takes us yet further into quantum reality, leading to what I consider the strangest version of all parallel universes proposals. It’s a proposal that emerged gradually over thirty years of theoretical studies spearheaded by luminaries including Stephen Hawking, Jacob Bekenstein, Gerardt Hooft, and Leonard Susskind on the quantum properties of black holes. The work culminated in the last decade, with a stunning result from string theory, and it suggests, remarkably, that all we experience is nothing but a holographic projection of processes taking place on some distant surface that surrounds us. You can pinch yourself, and what you feel will be real, but it mirrors a parallel process taking place in a different, distant reality.
Finally, in Chapter 10 the yet more fanciful possibility of artificial
universes takes center stage. The question of whether the laws of physics give us the capacity to create new universes will be our first order of
business. We’ll then turn to universes created not with hardware but
with software—universes that might be simulated on a superadvanced computer—and investigate whether we can be confident that we’re not now living in someone or something else’s simulation. This will lead to the most unrestrained parallel universe proposal, originating in the philosophical community: that every possible reality is realized somewhere in what’s surely the grandest of all multiverses. The discussion naturally unfolds into an inquiry about the role mathematics has in unraveling the mysteries of science and, ultimately, our ability, or lack thereof, to gain an ever-deeper understanding of the expanse of reality.
The Cosmic Order
The subject of parallel universes is highly speculative. No experiment or observation has established that any version of the idea is realized in nature. So my point in writing this book is not to convince you that we’re part of a multiverse. I’m not convinced—and, speaking generally, no one should be convinced—of anything not supported by hard data. That said, I find it both curious and compelling that numerous developments in physics, if followed sufficiently far, bump into some variation on the parallel universe theme. Of particular note, it’s not that physicists are standing ready, multiverse nets in their hands, seeking to snare any passing theory that might be slotted, however awkwardly, into a parallel- universe paradigm. Rather, all of the parallel-universe proposals that we will take seriously emerge unbidden from the mathematics of theories developed to explain conventional data and observations.
My intention, then, is to lay out clearly and concisely the intellectual steps and the chain of theoretical insights that have led physicists, from a range of perspectives, to consider the possibility that ours is one of many universes. I want you to get a sense of how modern scientific investigations— not untethered fantasies like the catoptric musings of my boyhood— naturally suggest this astounding possibility. I want to show you how certain otherwise confounding observations can become eminently understandable within one or another parallel-universe framework; at the same time, I’ll describe the critical unresolved questions that have, as yet, kept this explanatory approach from being fully realized. My aim is that when you leave this book, your sense of what might be— your perspective on how the boundaries of reality may one day be redrawn by scientific developments now under way— will be far more rich and vivid.
Some people recoil at the notion of parallel worlds; as they see it, if we are part of a multiverse, our place and importance in the cosmos are marginalized. My take is different. I don’t find merit in measuring significance by our relative abundance. Rather, what’s gratifying about being human, what’s exciting about being part of the scientific enterprise, is our ability to use analytical thought to bridge vast distances, journeying to outer and inner space and, if some of the ideas we’ll encounter in this book prove correct, perhaps even beyond our universe. For me, it is the depth of our understanding, acquired from our lonely vantage point in the inky black stillness of a cold and forbidding cosmos, that reverberates across the expanse of reality and marks our arrival.
Product details
- Publisher : Vintage; 0 edition (November 1, 2011)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 443 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0307278123
- ISBN-13 : 978-0307278128
- Item Weight : 15 ounces
- Dimensions : 8.04 x 5.29 x 0.93 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #65,005 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #69 in Quantum Theory (Books)
- #82 in Cosmology (Books)
- #106 in Astrophysics & Space Science (Books)
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About the author

Brian Greene received his undergraduate degree from Harvard University and his doctorate from Oxford University, where he was a Rhodes scholar. He is a professor of physics and mathematics at Columbia University and lives in New York City.
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Customers find the book engaging and worthwhile. They appreciate the clear presentation of complex ideas using analogies and logical reasoning. The book is described as spellbinding and thought-provoking.
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Customers find the book engaging and easy to understand. They appreciate the simple examples and logical reasoning used to explain complex ideas. The book is presented with literary ease that draws readers in.
"This is an impressive survey of 9 multiverse models by Greene featured in lucid, engaging and effortless prose...." Read more
"...contemporary physics, displaying his knack for making difficult concepts easy to understand by relating them to common, everyday examples from life,..." Read more
"...I was able to navigate back and forth with ease. This is especially important with concepts that are so unintuitive and astonishing...." Read more
"...I give Mr. Greene 3 stars only for a well-written book, but I don't wish to read any similar speculative fantasies by him in the future." Read more
Customers find the book interesting and worthwhile. They say it's a nice read for physics enthusiasts who are trying to understand the basics of String theory. The prose is lucid and effortless, making the whole point quite well. Readers consider the book good material for mental training, and mention there is an excellent YouTube documentary on the multiverse theories that keeps them engaged.
"...impressive survey of 9 multiverse models by Greene featured in lucid, engaging and effortless prose...." Read more
"This challenging, but fascinating, book from Brian Greene is another winner...." Read more
"...This is obviously subtle and in aggregate this is a very interesting read in which complicated arguments and phenomenon are well described and the..." Read more
"...universes, what reality really is or "might" be, this book is a very good read...." Read more
Customers find the book's writing engaging and well-presented. They appreciate the author's lucid, thoughtful presentation of a complex subject.
"...is an impressive survey of 9 multiverse models by Greene featured in lucid, engaging and effortless prose...." Read more
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"...The writing is superb and easy to understand for even non-mathletes...." Read more
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Customers find the book's pacing fast and engaging. They find the story fascinating, with an exciting narrative that uses metaphors, analogies, historical anecdotes, and humor. The book is described as a fun masterpiece of popular science writing.
"...inclined, an extensive index, and using metaphor, analogy, historical anecdotes, and a touch of humour, Professor Greene looks at the latest..." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2023This is an impressive survey of 9 multiverse models by Greene featured in lucid, engaging and effortless prose. This should be a go to book for the public as well as physics students for a conceptual understanding of the multiverse models available.
He began with the "Quilted multiverse" model. This model sets up the most basic bare bone structure of the rationale of multiverse theory. Consider our own visible universe's cosmic horizon of a 14 billion year old universe. The cosmic horizon visible to us is only 41 billion light years (distance based on the light coming from objects receding from us). Our cosmic horizon or patch is all there is ever visible to us. The entire universe in the infinite space can contains infinite number of patches each with it's own cosmic horizon, constituting a quilted universe. Each patch is out of reach of the other patches. This is a basic multiverse model showing each multiverse in its own cosmic horizon patch.
The "inflationary model" from Alan Guth and Andrei Linde offers further mechanism to account for how the vast expanse of the multiverse can be built out. The idea is an inflation that is triggered by quantum jitter in high energy inflation field level causing it to expand and bubble out into different multiverses. This inflationary mechanism is also commonly used in other multiverse models.
Greene, as a String theorist, offers the String Theory model of multiverse by considering our 3 dimensional expanse universe on a 3-brane sheet. Another multiverse would be on another 3-brane sheet, and there can be as many 3-brane sheets on which each multiverse exists. This multiverse model is the "Brane Multiverse" model.
Another String Theory model is the "Landscape" model offered by Suskind. In this model, an inflationary mechanism for bubbling into multiverse is augmented with a further feature of quantum tunneling. A multiverse suffused with higher energy level or cosmological constant can expand via repulsion and inflate, but tunnels or drops down to a lower energy level for bubbling into another multiverse. The multitude of landscape with different cosmological constants represented by unique Calabi Yau manifolds can continue and repeat this tunneling process for proliferating further multiverses.
Greene also offers a thorough discussion of the Everttian "multiple-world quantum" model. In this model, the Everttian interpretation of quantum mechanics by branching the possible outcomes of quantum state into different worlds is treated as another multiverse model. Instead of collapsing probability amplitudes as in Copenhagen interpretation, Evertt suggested to let probability outcomes to branch out into different worlds such that each outcome constitute its own world. Greene highlighted that Everttian rationale is that multi-world interpretation actually stays faithful to Schrodinger equation and let the equation results speak for itself instead of ad hoc adding probability amplitudes together which are not reflected in the equation. Greene also discussed if such a multi-world interpretation takes quantum probability seriously, which he thinks each multi-world is still a probabilistic outcome.
Another model Greene discussed in this work is the conceptually challenging "Holographic multiverse" model. In this model, our universe is a mere holographic phenomena taking place on a distant bounding surface, a physically equivalent parallel universe. In the holographic principle, open strings movement on 3-branes is described by quantum field particle theory in four dimensional space-time. The physics described is the same as the closed loop strings on 10 dimensional black branes as long as the strings at low energy are closed to the event horizon surface. Hence the holographic model reveals universes as holograms of equivalent parallel universes.
Three other models discussed are the Cyclic multiverse model and the mathematical models of "Simulated Multiverse" and "Ultimate Multiverse" models which consider mathematical multiverses to be as real as physical multiverses. There is also a chapter devoted to methodological issues such as experimental accessibility, predictions, and the limits of mathematical applicability to physics.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2014This challenging, but fascinating, book from Brian Greene is another winner. It turns out that there's not just one version of the multiverse proposal but several, ranging from the Quilted and Inflationary Multiverses to the Brane and Quantum Multiverses. If you'r not careful you could get lost on this mathematical road trip. Drawing on everyday analogues to help explain the various examples of the Multiverse, Greene delves into the mysteries of Quantum Mechanics and Relativity searching for some common ground. As always his writing is geared for the well-read layperson but it helps to have a good background in reading this type of book. If you've read his previous books or similar titles by other authors then this one shouldn't be much of a problem. The whole idea of the Multiverse is based on extreme mathematics but you don't have to be a math wizard to enjoy the book. While the approach is non mathematical Greene does provide some equations (in the notes) for anybody so inclined. Some of the information is given as a kind of "refresher course" in String Theory and Quantum Mechanics but the author gives you the opportunity skip ahead if you wish to. Not being a physicists myself I tend to appreciate that kind of approach. The book is presented in 11 chapters with each chapter devoted to one or two kinds of Multiverse so the reader gets an in depth look at each variety. I found that some chapters were easier to read than others and there were some sections that were a little overwhelming in content. It took me two passes to read The Elegant Universe and three attempts on The Hidden Reality but in the end I got through both of them. I liked the section on the Inflationary Multiverse and it's "Swiss Cheese" analogy, it was the easiest to get through while the section on Quantum Mechanics, Probability Waves and Entropy was the most difficult. A good portion of the book is devoted to the history of theoretical physics and multiverse scenarios, giving you a look at the important people and events that made the most impact. To some people things like String Theory and Multiverses are more of a philosophy than a science since proof of their existence lies beyond our currant technology to access. To that end, the book closes with a section of extreme speculation on the future of computer simulation, artificial intelligence and the Multiverse. Read at your own risk. Scientist the world over are pushing the boundaries of knowledge with mathematics and observations, as well as complicated experiments but, so far, have not been unable to come up with any defining answers. And if the answers are not there or they lead in a different direction, then we will have to come up with a whole new set of metaphors to explain the world around us. The Hidden Reality gives you a well written glimpse at this strange landscape. But keep in mind that neither Greene or anyone else know for certain whether or not there are indeed Multiverses out there and he's the first one to admit that. Theoretical Physics is an active, fast changing field and researchers like Greene will continue probing the fringes of the known universe, looking for a way to combine electromagnetism and gravity into one coherent theory and also looking for the back door into other worlds and universes that may be lurking just out of sight, in some hidden reality. I recommend this book to any science reader who has an open, but skeptical, mind. While I had no technical or formatting problems with this Kindle edition it would have been nice if the publisher had saw fit to include the index, from the hard bound edition, to aid in searching the book.
LastRanger
Top reviews from other countries
ChuydReviewed in Mexico on August 20, 20205.0 out of 5 stars Excellent and clear
Very well explained and clear to people without a solid background in quantum mechanics
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yaReviewed in Spain on September 7, 20195.0 out of 5 stars Fantastico
Fantastico como Greene consigue hacernos entender a todos los conceptos más complejos
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Amazon CustomerReviewed in France on May 26, 20185.0 out of 5 stars Relativement bon. Haha.
Très agréable à lire, très bonne vulgarisation pour le néophyte que je suis, l'auteur sait se mettre à la portée du lecteur
Candace OhanessianReviewed in Australia on July 23, 20205.0 out of 5 stars Great book, truly mindblowing
Get the inside scoop on all things multiverse. Be prepared to work hard and have your own universe expanded.
Sukalp KaranjekarReviewed in India on May 10, 20155.0 out of 5 stars An Intellectual Feast on Deep Cosmology
Brian Greene belongs to the rare breed of scientists who like to explain deep scientific concepts in simple words so that common people can understand it and connect with the concepts. Let it be general theory of relativity, quantum mechanics, string theory or multiverse theory, Brian Greene explains them so well that not only he gets readers to understand the gist of these theories but also gets them to ponder upon implications and extension of it.
This book is about human endeavor to understand reality. Throughout the history of humanity, we have pondered about natural phenomena and come up with explanations behind them. Newton came up with laws of motion and mathematical equation for working of gravity. Einstein transformed our understanding of time and space with general theory of relativity, Heisenberg and others transformed our understanding of world of small particles with quantum mechanics – we are continuing with the scientific march to push boundaries of human knowledge.
Our increasing understanding of universe has brought us at corner of whole new realm – the concept of multiple universes.
Before reading this book, I considered concept of multiple universes to be one of interesting but otherwise purely theoretical hypothesis. But this book presents multiple universe system as logical and mathematical extension of our already existing and proven scientific theories.
In fact, this book defines not one but about 9 different types of multiple universes that stems from existing theories such as quantum mechanics and string theory.
These theories represents pinnacle of human knowledge till date, they indicate how far we have reached till date in understanding reality.
Multiverse theory is only theory that looks promising enough to answer 'Why there is something rather than nothing?' and Brian Greene has done a great job explaining it.







