- #141
yoda jedi
- 397
- 1
just throw away string theory (and the froot loop theory too)...
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yoda jedi said:just throw away string theory (and the froot loop theory too)...
Maybe you should understand String Theory first, and then you could speak about the ST research program with some knowdlege at least... What would you say if you were a ST physicist and if someone who has never studied ST, who has never made any research in ST, who quote ST papers that does not understand enters in your office and starts making claims about the "ST research program" and the "evolution of ST".marcus said:I'm tired of arguing about that one, Atyy. "Subtle" or not, I'm very interested in the points that Suprised has made here. I'd like to understand better how the program is going to evolve---what direction it will take going forward.
marcus said:In academic circles it's fairly usual to gauge that by (1) citations to current work, and (2) attendance at the main annual conference. Neither measure is perfect, of course, but that's often how you get a rough idea of how active a field is----outside of physics as well.
atyy said:I'm a biologist. Whenever anyone does that for my field, I conclude they are not willing to think for themselves.
suprised said:...
With regards to string conference attendance: there was only one dip, and this was last year. Ppl have attributed this to the grossly unattractive conference site in the middle of nowhere, in contrast to previous ones. As far as I can tell, the collegues around me incl myself didn't go largely for this reason.
In order to make claims as you do, you should make out a longer term trend. What you do is to stir in a coffe pot and try to make general conclusions about the pattern you choose to see...
Since I decided to concentrate on those two measures (1) and (2), I would not ordinarily be tracking research output of anybody young or old. But since you mention some excellent young people (I have a high opinion e.g. of Andy Neitzke and have seen a lot of references to papers where Allday has at least been co-author) I think I may try giving them the same treatment. Gaiotto and Nekrasov are also familiar names.Why don't you check names like (random order) Gaiotto, Nekrasov, Neitzke, Alday, Drummond, etc? These are people that may be too young for you to appear on your radar screen. But they are among the driving forces of what ppl are excited about these days.
And thenmarcus said:...it's not about what nature IS. Physics is about how Nature responds to measurement.
I agree.Where are the measurements in the various string theories or proto-theories? How are measurements represented mathematically? It might be interesting if someone would discuss that a bit.
Niels Bohr said:It is wrong to think that the task of physics is to find out how nature is. Physics concerns what we can say about nature?
.Horgan said:...pursue science in a speculative, non-empirical mode that (Horgan calls) ironic science. Ironic science resembles literature or philosophy or theology in that it offers points of view, opinions, which are, at best, "interesting," which provoke further comment.
marcus said:Then since judging by citations is so common there must be a great many people whom you deem unwilling to think for themselves. Academics have a love-hate relation with cite-counts.
I sympathize since I also tend to evaluate stuff independently on my own. But hiring committees and deans are aware of citations and such. Funding agencies would pay attention to this kind of measure. You may have applied for grants or been up for tenure--and have first hand experience of this.
We devoutly believe that nothing beats an intelligent person's subjective assessment. But even so we are always getting rated on the basis of objectifiable external circumstances. Especially if it is by a committee, because the various subjective judgments may not coincide.
oldman said:Which is not quite the same thing. Talk is cheap. Measurement is probably impossible in the
realm of string theory and loop quantum gravity, etc. Both are (mathematical) talk that so far has failed to meet the long-established gold standard that distinguishes physics from say, literary criticism; namely of being able to make verifiable predictions.
.. .
unusualname said:...
Basically, reality is a work in progress by mankind, if the popular press want to portray the state-or-the-art expert thinking in simple terms like "extra space dimensions" then that's the way it is. The fact the some of the people involved contribute to this portrayal doesn't help. But it's a mathematical model, sorry suckers but reality really isn't the way your mind conceives it,
marcus said:YESSS!
This has the ring of truth. And where is the act of measurement represented in this mathematical model? Or collection of models?
There is probably a simple obvious answer, so just to make it explicit: Where in various related models are we told about the limitations of measurement?
I would like to have built into my model the idea of what information is accessible about the world's geometry---a concrete representation of the geometrical measurements we are allowed to make.
atyy said:...
More seriously, people on committees know they will make mistakes, but they do their best given limited time and funding and responsibility to the source of funding. But I'm sure the best people on committees do not rely on statistics, preferring to make their own mistakes.
...
unusualname said:I think we've got pretty close to the "geometry" of reality, just that we've gone off on all sorts of really weird and convoluted paths trying to complete it. Mainly because we're trying to make nature conform to a deterministic model at some level, when it doesn't, but that's just my (maybe wrong) idea.
marcus said:Great! It's good news that you are close to the "geometry" of reality.
I want to understand better this going off on various different paths.
I'm interested in your idea that the divergence or dispersal into different models has to do with nature not conforming to a single deterministic model.
There was an exchange between Tom and Suprised which might interest you, if you didn't happen to see it. One of Suprised's points relates to what you said.
I quoted the exchange in post #129 of this thread, to have it handy:
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?p=3266311#post3266311
(I note with amusement that this post also contained a tabulation of attendance at past Strings conferences, one of our objective measures of the state of health, ridiculous or not.)
marcus said:Come on, Yoda, these things are quite fascinating and you know it.
marcus said:Bohr's Truth (actual quote as found by Oldman):
"IIt is wrong to think that the task of physics is to find out how nature is. Physics concerns what we can say about nature."
But he said it roughly 100 years ago, so I interpret the Bohr quote in the light of a stern Lutheran north-Europe culture where you could go to hell for saying what you didn't know---for making up stories about nature without firm justification. "What we can say..." I (personally) interpret to mean what we can say with sober righteous empirical justification.
And empiricism is not about what it IS but about how it responds to measurement. One is in a continuous interrogatory dialog.
So I disagree with your interpretation but nevertheless find your post a cheerful ray of light. It is good to have the exact (English translation?) Bohr quote.
negru said:String theory is usually classified under high energy, not quantum gravity, so I'm not sure how useful that is.
Papers making the QG top ten
Year 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010
String-related 4 3 1 4 3 2
marcus said:...
The most obvious thing I guess is that the string presence in QG is FLAT. There is no decline shown here. Interestingly there is a decline if you look at the Spires HEP database as a whole. Look back to post #161. You might want to try to figure out why that is. From 12 out of the TopFifty down to 1 out of the TopFifty. Maybe you can decide on some simple explanation.
Atyy has already given an explanation for the decline from 12/50 to 1/50. But you might want to think of your own preferred reasons.
BTW traditionally a theory of quantum gravity is expected to resolve the singularity at the start of expansion, and therefore to make testable predictions about early universe (CMB observations). I think this expectation goes back to John Archibald Wheeler, possibly earlier.
2003-2004 2005-2006 2007-2008 2009-2010
Gaiotto 5 9 5 4
Alday 1 5 4 0
Neitzke 3 2 1 0
Nekrasov 4 3 1 2
Strominger 15 7 4 0
Dijkgraaf 4 5 3 4
Polchinski 8 3 2 2
Maldacena 17 7 5 4
Gibbons,G 6 5 1 1
Harvey,J 4 5 2 0
Ooguri 7 6 3 4
Silverstein,E 9 7 5 5