A linkpost for Peter Woit's critique of Conversations on Quantum Gravity
hnryjmes.substack.com
Quantum gravity is perhaps the best known ‘unsolved problem’ in physics: the final puzzle piece that serious people believe could give us a physical 'theory of everything’. But the literature on the topic tends to exist either in the realm of popular science (e.g. Rovelli, Smolin) or way out in the extrema of research seminars and arXiv papers. It seems that there might be a gap in the market for something ‘in between’.
A linkpost for Peter Woit's critique of Conversations on Quantum Gravity
A linkpost for Peter Woit's critique of…
A linkpost for Peter Woit's critique of Conversations on Quantum Gravity
Quantum gravity is perhaps the best known ‘unsolved problem’ in physics: the final puzzle piece that serious people believe could give us a physical 'theory of everything’. But the literature on the topic tends to exist either in the realm of popular science (e.g. Rovelli, Smolin) or way out in the extrema of research seminars and arXiv papers. It seems that there might be a gap in the market for something ‘in between’.