An enormously important book
Moderator: Global Moderator
-
- Executive Member
- Posts: 5994
- Joined: Wed Dec 31, 1969 6:00 pm
An enormously important book
In which he proves the existence of parallel universes.
By page 53.
https://www.amazon.com/Fabric-Reality-P ... op?ie=UTF8
By page 53.
https://www.amazon.com/Fabric-Reality-P ... op?ie=UTF8
-
- Executive Member
- Posts: 527
- Joined: Mon Aug 24, 2015 3:12 pm
Re: An enormously important book
I started reading another one of his books (Beginning of Infinity), but lost interest. Maybe I'll give it another look since you respect his writing.
-
- Executive Member
- Posts: 5994
- Joined: Wed Dec 31, 1969 6:00 pm
Re: An enormously important book
Thanks. Do you still have that other book? I've been thinking about buying it after I get through this one.Jack Jones wrote:I started reading another one of his books (Beginning of Infinity), but lost interest. Maybe I'll give it another look since you respect his writing.
Re: An enormously important book
I'm hearing more and more lately about the theory of parallel universes. I remember reading that Steven Hawking was once big on the idea but I thought he abandoned it. Googling on the subject just now I see that he is suggesting that going through a black hole might be a tunnel into a parallel universe after all. Reminds me of what I read about Einstein and Quantum mechanics. He made a lot of the initial discoveries but abandoned them until some real world tests proved them to be true.
Seems very unlikely the theory will ever be testable in my lifetime. Will have to settle for watching "The Man in the High Castle".
Seems very unlikely the theory will ever be testable in my lifetime. Will have to settle for watching "The Man in the High Castle".
-
- Executive Member
- Posts: 5994
- Joined: Wed Dec 31, 1969 6:00 pm
Re: An enormously important book
It's not a theory.farjean2 wrote:I'm hearing more and more lately about the theory of parallel universes. I remember reading that Steven Hawking was once big on the idea but I thought he abandoned it. Googling on the subject just now I see that he is suggesting that going through a black hole might be a tunnel into a parallel universe after all. Reminds me of what I read about Einstein and Quantum mechanics. He made a lot of the initial discoveries but abandoned them until some real world tests proved them to be true.
Seems very unlikely the theory will ever be testable in my lifetime. Will have to settle for watching "The Man in the High Castle".
It's a fact.
Read the book up to page 53 and you'll see that he proves it.
Re: An enormously important book
Can you summarize briefly how he proves it?Libertarian666 wrote:It's not a theory.farjean2 wrote:I'm hearing more and more lately about the theory of parallel universes. I remember reading that Steven Hawking was once big on the idea but I thought he abandoned it. Googling on the subject just now I see that he is suggesting that going through a black hole might be a tunnel into a parallel universe after all. Reminds me of what I read about Einstein and Quantum mechanics. He made a lot of the initial discoveries but abandoned them until some real world tests proved them to be true.
Seems very unlikely the theory will ever be testable in my lifetime. Will have to settle for watching "The Man in the High Castle".
It's a fact.
Read the book up to page 53 and you'll see that he proves it.
-
- Executive Member
- Posts: 5994
- Joined: Wed Dec 31, 1969 6:00 pm
Re: An enormously important book
Yes.farjean2 wrote:Can you summarize briefly how he proves it?Libertarian666 wrote:It's not a theory.farjean2 wrote:I'm hearing more and more lately about the theory of parallel universes. I remember reading that Steven Hawking was once big on the idea but I thought he abandoned it. Googling on the subject just now I see that he is suggesting that going through a black hole might be a tunnel into a parallel universe after all. Reminds me of what I read about Einstein and Quantum mechanics. He made a lot of the initial discoveries but abandoned them until some real world tests proved them to be true.
Seems very unlikely the theory will ever be testable in my lifetime. Will have to settle for watching "The Man in the High Castle".
It's a fact.
Read the book up to page 53 and you'll see that he proves it.
The one-photon-at-a-time two-slit interference experiment proves that a photon can interfere with versions of itself that cannot be detected by any means other than such an experiment. The number of other versions of one photon is essentially unlimited, because you can move the slits wherever you want and you still get interference with them. These other versions of the photon cannot be in this universe, yet they exist.
Q. E. D.
Re: An enormously important book
So basically, the author claims the existence of parallel universes is now a bona-fide "theory"?Libertarian666 wrote:Yes.farjean2 wrote: Can you summarize briefly how he proves it?
The one-photon-at-a-time two-slit interference experiment proves that a photon can interfere with versions of itself that cannot be detected by any means other than such an experiment. The number of other versions of one photon is essentially unlimited, because you can move the slits wherever you want and you still get interference with them. These other versions of the photon cannot be in this universe, yet they exist.
Q. E. D.
A scientific theory is a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world, based on a body of facts that have been repeatedly confirmed through observation and experiment. Such fact-supported theories are not "guesses" but reliable accounts of the real world.
Re: An enormously important book
Yeah, that's miles away from a proof. A parallel universe is one guess as to the reason behind the results of the double-slit experiment.
Even if it did prove parallel universes (which it doesn't), it's even many more miles away from the popular conception of parallel universes, where we all have some Doppelgänger leading something resembling our own lives.
Even if it did prove parallel universes (which it doesn't), it's even many more miles away from the popular conception of parallel universes, where we all have some Doppelgänger leading something resembling our own lives.
-
- Executive Member
- Posts: 5994
- Joined: Wed Dec 31, 1969 6:00 pm
Re: An enormously important book
That's why I didn't want to explain the proof.
It's only 53 pages, but that's a lot more than I can use to explain it here, even assuming that I understand it well enough to do so.
It's only 53 pages, but that's a lot more than I can use to explain it here, even assuming that I understand it well enough to do so.
Re: An enormously important book
Pretty sure I wouldn't understand the proof any way. I've read several books on quantum mechanics because it's a fascinating subject but if it gets bogged down too much in the details my high school physics education leaves me feeling completely lost. When it comes to quantum mechanics however there is this - Without quantum mechanics there would be no transistor, and hence no personal computer; no laser, and hence no Blu-ray players.Libertarian666 wrote:That's why I didn't want to explain the proof.
It's only 53 pages, but that's a lot more than I can use to explain it here, even assuming that I understand it well enough to do so.
So I'm trying to imagine what real world application there might be based on the slot experiments you described in the future. Boggles the mind, if true.
Did the author offer a Schrodinger's cat like example of the phenomenon? Like we don't know what universe the cat in the box really belongs to until we open the box?
Really interesting stuff.
-
- Executive Member
- Posts: 5994
- Joined: Wed Dec 31, 1969 6:00 pm
Re: An enormously important book
There is essentially no math in this book. I'm sure you will be able to follow the argument at least up until page 53.farjean2 wrote:Pretty sure I wouldn't understand the proof any way. I've read several books on quantum mechanics because it's a fascinating subject but if it gets bogged down too much in the details my high school physics education leaves me feeling completely lost. When it comes to quantum mechanics however there is this - Without quantum mechanics there would be no transistor, and hence no personal computer; no laser, and hence no Blu-ray players.Libertarian666 wrote:That's why I didn't want to explain the proof.
It's only 53 pages, but that's a lot more than I can use to explain it here, even assuming that I understand it well enough to do so.
So I'm trying to imagine what real world application there might be based on the slot experiments you described in the future. Boggles the mind, if true.
Did the author offer a Schrodinger's cat like example of the phenomenon? Like we don't know what universe the cat in the box really belongs to until we open the box?
Really interesting stuff.