In this stunning new volume, Jim Baggott argues that there is no observational or experimental evidence for many of the ideas of modern theoretical physics: super-symmetric particles, super strings, the multiverse, the holographic principle, or the anthropic cosmological principle. These theories are not only untrue, it is not even science. It is fairy-tale physics: fantastical, bizarre and often outrageous, perhaps even confidence-trickery.This book provides a much-needed antidote. Informed, comprehensive, and balanced, it offers lay readers the latest ideas about the nature of physical reality while clearly distinguishing between fact and fantasy. With its engaging portraits of many central figures of modern physics, including Paul Davies, John Barrow, Brian Greene, Stephen Hawking, and Leonard Susskind, it promises to be essential reading forall readers interested in what we know and don't know about the nature of the universe and reality itself.
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Review:
Intellectually gratifying.
From superstrings and black holes to dark matter and multiverses, modern theoretical physics revels in the bizarre. Now it s wandered into the realm of fairy-tale, says science writer and former practicing physicist Baggott (A Beginners Guide to Reality). Quantum theory led scientists to create a Standard Model of physics in the mid-20th century, but that model is really an amalgam of distinct individual quantum theories necessary to describe a diverse array of forces and particles. Meanwhile, astronomical observations have revealed that 90% of our universe is made of something we can t see (dark matter); some mysterious dark energy is pushing all of it apart at an accelerating rate, and physicists are gambling on a supersymmetry theory in hopes that it could be the holy grail, a Grand Unified Field Theory that might lend coherence to the Standard Model while explaining some of the phenomena the latter fails to account for despite the fact, Baggott says, that for every standard model problem it resolves, another problem arises that needs a fix. In consistently accessible and intelligent prose, Baggott sympathetically captures the frustrations of physicists while laying out a provocative and very convincing plea for a reality check in a field that he feels is now too meta for its own good. "
Intellectually gratifying. "
Baggott has done something that I would have thought impossible in a popular book. He navigates successfully between the Scylla of mathematical rigor and the Charybd is of popular nonsense.
The basic history behind the quantum revolution is well known, but no one has ever told it in such a compellingly human and thematically seamless way.
Book Description:
A controversial popular science title in which Jim Baggott asks whether all that we currently know about the universe is based upon science or fantasy.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
- PublisherPegasus Books
- Publication date2013
- ISBN 10 1605984728
- ISBN 13 9781605984728
- BindingHardcover
- Number of pages338
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Rating