The Empty Space is a 1968 book by the British director Peter Brook examining four modes or points of view on theatre: Deadly; Holy; Rough; and Immediate.
The book is based on a series of four lectures endowed by Granada Television and delivered at Manchester, Keele, Hull, and Sheffield Universities in England. The first lecture, on The Deadly Theatre, was delivered on 1 February 1965 at Manchester University. The lecture series helped to fund his long-planned trip to Afghanistan.The work was considered controversial when first published in 1968 and received mixed reviews. However, it is now widely taught in higher education theatre studies courses.
The Empty Space is defined by Brook as "[A]ny space in which theatre takes place." "I can take any empty space and call it a bare stage. A man walks across this empty space whilst someone else is watching him, and this is all that is needed for an act of theatre to be engaged".Empty Space Peter Brook Award
The Empty Space Peter Brook Award was an annual prize awarded to a theatre in recognition of pioneering concepts and innovations in theatre achieved in smaller venues and inventive spaces which receive minimal or no public funding. Award categories included regional theatres and up-and-coming theatre. Winners include the Orange Tree Theatre, Richmond, London (2006 and 2015), Unicorn Theatre, London (2014), the Shed at the National Theatre, London (2013), and the Finborough Theatre, London (2012 and 2010). The last award, to The Yard Theatre in London, was made in 2017.
Why is Einstein's law of gravitation for empty space sometimes identified as Ricci tensor=0 instead of Einstein tensor=0. The first condition implies the second one, but not the other way around.
Hi,
I understand that electrons in a solid (eg. metal), can be treated as Fermi gas obeying Fermi-Dirac statistics, which incorporates the exclusion principle. This differs from a normal gas because a regular (ideal) gas of atoms or molecules can have atoms occuppying exactly the same energy...
Hi I'm a newbie for GR so please answer my basic question
in empty space why we say for 2 or 3 Dimensions field equations in that region must have a curvature tensor equal to 0
but when we say about 4-D or higher , the curvature tensor which non-vanish can satisfy EFE?
I think when we...
People say gravity is an extremely weak force. Weaker than any of the other three basic forces that govern our universe. Explanations to this have varied in all forms of radical ideas (I'm not saying I outright reject them). But it has always pestered me the idea that perhaps gravity is such a...
I have a question.
If empty space is, according to relativity theory, curved, and it is expanding (ie. it has properties) then logically, empty space must be made from "something" right?
And this something could be interacted with?
Ned Wright's best fit standard LCDM is simply one possible concrete version of the usual LCDM model that cosmologists use. It has the normally preferred parameters (0.27, 0.73, 71) plus the estimate that Wright gave of Omega = 1.011.
That's what he gave in January 2007 as the best LCDM fit to...
How can "empty space" expand? (Reality behind the GR equations.)
I have a question - with some concerns over how it may be answered. On other websites, and in other print publications, I've seen Ph.D. physicists and cosmologists misunderstand the question: What does it mean when we say that...
Once again, hello to all !:smile: ,
I'm back with another quick question ...
Can you explain or redirect me to an explanation of what the term ' empty space ' means.
It’ all over in the threads I read, but it’s not quite clear to me as to what it pertains to …
Thank you,
VE
What is vaccum? Many say its "empty" space. But what does "empty" mean? Does it mean that there are no atoms (or protons/electrons, or quarks, or strings)?
Can anyone explain this?
Through what medium does EM propagate in "empty" space?
Einstein stated in his Leyden address (1926, I think) that an EM ether was mandatory for the transmission of EM waves through "empty" space. He was unable to reconcile this with the dynamical gravitational ether that had to exist to make...
Is there a short answer why pair production can not happen in empty space, but that photons must interact with an external field?
thanks and a nice weekend
oh, just saw someone asked the same question in the nuclei section today and answers already there
From what I understand, empty space has a temperature of 2.7 degrees K? And that empty space still gives off micro-wave radiation from the big bang?
Can someone help me visualize this? For me, the idea of empty space giving off radiation and having a temperature that isn't absolute zero is...
In reviewing explanations on evaporating Black Holes using Hawking Radiation, based on how the black hole might treat Quantum “Vacuum particle pairs”.
Although direct observation of Black Hole radiation has not been confirmed it implied that “Antiparticle – Particle creation, and self...
I was given this problem to think about from my professor. It's not for any class. It went something like this:
Imagine there is some magnetic field in empty space (tightly-packed lines curling around in a circle) at t=0. What happens to the field as t -> infinity.
I figured Maxwell's...
Following Hubble's discovery of the expanding universe, George Gamow postulated that the universe began as a big bang & calculated the temperature of empty space to be around 3 degrees Kelvin. In the early 60's this temperature was confirmed.
We now know that rate of expansion is...
I suppose this has been asked before, but I am somewhat new to this forum.
Beyond our known physical universe, there is a region of "empty space" Fine.
And if I were on the "edge" of our observable physical universe, and I traveled faster than C away from it, I suppose I would eventually...
For the past few thousand years or so, the philosophy of space has occupied a lot of time among philosophers. There is really no argument as to the traditional definition of "space" as it usually relates to volume, being length width and breadth. But the big debate has typically been over the...
If a spaceship throws a boomerang in the vacuum of the space but with some gravity from earth. Will it have the same trayectory than if you throw a stone of equal mass than the boomerang with equal force?
thanks