Billerica Public Library

The dream universe, how fundamental physics lost its way, David Lindley

Label
The dream universe, how fundamental physics lost its way, David Lindley
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical resources and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The dream universe
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1105937969
Responsibility statement
David Lindley
Sub title
how fundamental physics lost its way
Summary
"In the early seventeenth century Galileo broke free from the hold of ancient Platonic and Aristotelian philosophy. He drastically changed the framework through which we view the natural world when he asserted that we should base our theory of reality on what we can observe rather than pure thought. In the process, he invented what we would come to call science. This set the stage for all the breakthroughs that followed--from Kepler to Newton to Einstein. But in the early twentieth century when quantum physics, with its deeply complex mathematics, entered into the picture, something began to change. Many physicists began looking to the equations first and physical reality second. As we investigate realms further and further from what we can see and what we can test, we must look to elegant, aesthetically pleasing equations to develop our conception of what reality is. As a result, much of theoretical physics today is something more akin to the philosophy of Plato than the science to which the physicists are heirs. In The Dream Universe, Lindley asks what is science when it becomes completely untethered from measurable phenomena?"--Amazon
Classification
Mapped to

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