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Dismantling Space and Time [Review of book by Brian Greene]
Tech Central Station ^ | 09 March 2004 | Kenneth Silber

Posted on 07/15/2004 7:52:36 AM PDT by PatrickHenry

Space and time are pervasive in our everyday experience, and yet it is hard to say exactly what they are. They resist definition in terms other than themselves. Moreover, they have various subtle and elusive properties, with which science continues to grapple. Relativity and quantum mechanics, the physics breakthroughs of the 20th century, revolutionized scientific thinking about these subjects. And this revolution has not played itself out, since cutting-edge physics today involves further radical rethinking of time and space.

The Fabric of the Cosmos: Space, Time, and the Texture of Reality, by Brian Greene (Knopf, $28.95), is an excellent guide to the science of space and time, and to modern physics more generally. The book provides lucid expositions of arcane topics that often are either oversimplified or obfuscated in physics popularizations. Greene is adept at placing complex ideas into context, explaining how they relate to each other and distinguishing the various degrees between well-established fact and wild speculation.

Greene, a Columbia University professor, has emerged as a high-profile expositor of physics in recent years. Indeed, he is a physicist with a certain cultural cachet; among other activities, he has hosted a documentary based on his previous book The Elegant Universe, performed a cameo role in the movie Frequency, and collaborated with the Emerson String Quartet on a project combining superstring theory with string music.

Is space "something" -- a physical entity -- or just a concept for describing relations among objects? Greene sorts through several centuries of thought about this question. In the late 1600s, Isaac Newton argued that space has an absolute, independent existence, while his rival Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz took the relationist view. In the 19th century, physicist Ernst Mach undermined the prevailing Newtonian position, setting motion against a backdrop not of absolute space but of widely distributed matter. The forces we feel when we spin or accelerate, Mach argued, are exerted on us by all the other objects near and far; if you were alone in the cosmos, you wouldn't feel a thing.

Then came Einstein, whose relativity theories both reaffirmed and refuted aspects of the relationist view. It became clear that Newton's absolute space does not exist; space and time depend on the relative motion of observers. Then again, space was evidently "something," since it could be curved and warped by matter and energy. Moreover, spacetime, the union of what were previously seen as distinct entities, was absolute. In Greene's analogy, spacetime is like a loaf of bread; it can be sliced different ways by observers at different locations, but the overall shape is independent and unchanging.

Quantum mechanics transformed science's understanding of matter and energy, and brought new implications for space and time. There was now seen to be genuine randomness in physical phenomena, unlike the deterministic laws of Newton and Einstein. Particles exist in a haze of probability, and interfere with one another like waves. Moreover, space no longer reliably performs its basic role of separating objects. Rather, particles can be "entangled," or correlated with each other over large distances even though nothing passes between them; they behave, in a sense, as one object. Such entanglement is a very difficult concept to explain, and Greene does a laudable job of it.

Time presents further puzzles. For one, does time "flow"? Physics provides no clear basis for our sense of a shifting present that is distinct from past and future. Indeed, relativity runs counter to that everyday perception, since observers at widely different locations and speeds will disagree on what is happening "now." Greene leans toward the view that time's flow is a function of the human mind rather than of fundamental physics. But he notes, sensibly, that our understanding of this matter may be far from complete.

The arrow of time, or direction in which things change, poses another question. We are accustomed to eggs scrambling but not unscrambling, and to black coffee and cream being stirred into light coffee but never the reverse. Yet at a more fundamental level, physics appears symmetrical between past and future; a movie of the particles that compose the egg or coffee could be run in reverse and you wouldn't know the difference.

The time asymmetry of everyday life arises from increasing entropy, a measure of the disorder in a system. But what explains the drive toward higher entropy? A plausible answer is provided by the cosmological theory of inflation, in which space underwent a phase of extremely rapid expansion. Remarkably, as Greene points out, understanding why eggs get scrambled requires consideration of the earliest moments of the universe.

Yet science's picture of the early universe (and of certain cosmic features such as black holes) remains fuzzy. The reason is that the relevant theories, quantum mechanics and general relativity, are incompatible with each other. General relativity posits a spacetime that is geometrically smooth. Quantum mechanics suggests spacetime, at the smallest scale, is wildly tumultuous. Hence, physicists search for a theory that will reconcile such differences. This was the impetus for superstring theory, which later morphed into M-theory (the M can stand for various things, including mystery, matrix, and membrane).

The superstring/M-theory approach raises the possibility that the familiar three dimensions of space (and one dimension of time) are not all there is to reality. Instead, there are higher dimensions, which go unnoticed because they are curled up at small scales or impervious to the electromagnetic radiation with which we normally see things. In fact, space as we know it may be a "something" that is as real as any object: a three-dimensional membrane, or "brane," embedded in a higher-dimensional spacetime.

Research continues on M-theory, and on a competing approach called loop quantum gravity (which can be understood, roughly speaking, as involving little loops of space). Experimental verification of such cutting-edge physics is difficult, but Greene expresses optimism that experiments in the not-distant future will provide a window into the nature of space and time. There are indications in current theory that space and time arise from something yet more fundamental -- but what that something is, nobody knows.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: astronomy; briangreene; cosmology; crevolist; notevenwrong; physics; science; space; stringtheory; time
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To: theFIRMbss

I think you got shorted on a couple of your parts.


101 posted on 07/15/2004 11:59:02 AM PDT by OSHA (The meek may inherit the earth but they'll never get out of the Wal-Mart parking lot.)
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To: RightWhale

102 posted on 07/15/2004 12:00:31 PM PDT by scott0347 ("Free Republic": Disturb, manipulate, demonstrate for the right thing)
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To: Fedora

Hmm.. which brings me to another random thought: Since Dims are the mental equiv of a black hole, if placed side by side which would be the stronger force?


103 posted on 07/15/2004 12:02:18 PM PDT by Darksheare (Show compassion, club a baby troll today!)
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To: Conspiracy Guy; theFIRMbss

Even though Paris Hilton does look weird, if she dressed like a Goth chick she'd be good at it.
(And she'd still look 'good' enough for a certain age group of which I am part..)


104 posted on 07/15/2004 12:03:32 PM PDT by Darksheare (Show compassion, club a baby troll today!)
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To: Darksheare

Jesse Jackson:

The question is moot! Whichever Democrat has the most money will displace the other one, according to McAuliffe's Law.


105 posted on 07/15/2004 12:05:11 PM PDT by Fedora (Kerryman, Kerryman, does whatever a ketchup can/Spins a lie, any size, catches wives just like flies)
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To: Darksheare

Joan Rivers is a huge Goth Fashion Plate.


106 posted on 07/15/2004 12:08:43 PM PDT by Conspiracy Guy (Kerry has a Carter Plan. Bush has a Reagan Plan. You choose which is your plan.)
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To: scott0347

Kant had the ability to make the difficult perfectly clear which is why there is total agreement among philosophers to this day. In fact, their job is done and they have all gone into retirement.


107 posted on 07/15/2004 12:10:28 PM PDT by RightWhale (Withdraw from the 1967 UN Outer Space Treaty and establish property rights)
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To: Fedora

*EEk!*


108 posted on 07/15/2004 12:12:06 PM PDT by Darksheare (Show compassion, club a baby troll today!)
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To: Conspiracy Guy

Yikes..
I was thinking more along the lines of Amy Lee gothic.
Paris Hilton looks like the type who'd be weird behind the scenes..


109 posted on 07/15/2004 12:13:16 PM PDT by Darksheare (Show compassion, club a baby troll today!)
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To: Darksheare

Behind the scenes or behind the dumpster?


110 posted on 07/15/2004 12:22:19 PM PDT by Conspiracy Guy (Kerry has a Carter Plan. Bush has a Reagan Plan. You choose which is your plan.)
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To: Conspiracy Guy

*Stays mum*


111 posted on 07/15/2004 12:23:37 PM PDT by Darksheare (Show compassion, club a baby troll today!)
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To: Darksheare

You demon you. She'd just a kid.


112 posted on 07/15/2004 12:26:36 PM PDT by Conspiracy Guy (Kerry has a Carter Plan. Bush has a Reagan Plan. You choose which is your plan.)
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To: Conspiracy Guy

I'm a demon now?
*sigh*
And to some I'm just a kid as well.
(To some frames of reference, 29 is relatively youthful. I keep getting reminded of that by my relatives.)


113 posted on 07/15/2004 12:41:13 PM PDT by Darksheare (Show compassion, club a baby troll today!)
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To: King Prout; OSHA
"entanglement"

To this lay person, it looks like proof of additional dimensions(hyperspace, sub-space) and what ever ties them together functions through those dimensions.

114 posted on 07/15/2004 12:45:28 PM PDT by StriperSniper ("Ronald Reagan, the Founding Father of the Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy." - Mark Levin 6/8/04)
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To: Darksheare

At 29 I had a 3 year old daughter and a 19 month old son. I had a house, 2 cars, a stay at home wife, a full time job and was going to college 2 nights a week.

At 50 I have a 24.5 year old daughter with a BS degree, a career, and she's married. A 23 year old son with his masters degree and career that starts next month. An ex-wife who got the house. A new wife, a house, a truck, a car, a boat, a dog and a cat.

I act 16 and look 45.


115 posted on 07/15/2004 12:51:27 PM PDT by Conspiracy Guy (Kerry has a Carter Plan. Bush has a Reagan Plan. You choose which is your plan.)
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To: Conspiracy Guy

LOL!
The embodiment of "Grow up not old"?


116 posted on 07/15/2004 12:53:19 PM PDT by Darksheare (Show compassion, club a baby troll today!)
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To: Darksheare

My refusal to worry and my faith in tomorrow were factors that lead to the demise of the marriage to my ex. She wanted to worry about tomorrow worry about today and fight me about it. To me that is like she was saying, "I don't believe in you and I have no faith either and since I'm not happy you can't be either". Heck we were comfortable middle class as it was. Glad that's over, I kept trying till it almost killed me.

Laura Earl is just like me and my kids love her.


117 posted on 07/15/2004 1:04:21 PM PDT by Conspiracy Guy (Kerry has a Carter Plan. Bush has a Reagan Plan. You choose which is your plan.)
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To: Conspiracy Guy

"..worry about tomorrow worry about today and fight me about it."
This sounds eerily familiar.


118 posted on 07/15/2004 1:08:35 PM PDT by Darksheare (Show compassion, club a baby troll today!)
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To: StriperSniper
I found more than I will ever need to know or understand here.
119 posted on 07/15/2004 1:10:02 PM PDT by OSHA (The meek may inherit the earth but they'll never get out of the Wal-Mart parking lot.)
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To: OSHA

Thanks, I'll check it out.


120 posted on 07/15/2004 1:13:04 PM PDT by StriperSniper ("Ronald Reagan, the Founding Father of the Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy." - Mark Levin 6/8/04)
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