- #36
mcgucken
- 29
- 0
Thanks for all the feedback here, but all I'm looking for is one or two papers we could discuss.
If nobody else suggests a couple papers, or if nobody knows of any, then I will introduce a couple papers to discuss, which I believe are the leading papers/definitive papers on String Theory.
But it seems very strange to me that nobody can name a definitive paper.
When we discuss Relativity, be it SR or GR, there are a couple of very definitive papers, written by an Individual--Einstein.
When we discuss QM, there are perhpas more definitive papers, but there are definitive papers, written by Bohr, Planck, Einstein, Debroglie, Heisenberg, Dirac, Pauli, Shrodenger.
But somehow String Theory seems to get by without any definitive papers or individuals. I know there's Brian Greene and Edward Witten, and I've read some of their scholarly work, but I wouldn't call it definitive, as it doesn't add up--it's more of a promise and a request for faith.
Thanks again for all the feedback, and I hope I'm not stepping out of bounds, but to have a proper discussion of string theory, it seems we would need to start with string theory's central postualtes, which would be in a definitive paper somewhere.
Thanks!
If nobody else suggests a couple papers, or if nobody knows of any, then I will introduce a couple papers to discuss, which I believe are the leading papers/definitive papers on String Theory.
But it seems very strange to me that nobody can name a definitive paper.
When we discuss Relativity, be it SR or GR, there are a couple of very definitive papers, written by an Individual--Einstein.
When we discuss QM, there are perhpas more definitive papers, but there are definitive papers, written by Bohr, Planck, Einstein, Debroglie, Heisenberg, Dirac, Pauli, Shrodenger.
But somehow String Theory seems to get by without any definitive papers or individuals. I know there's Brian Greene and Edward Witten, and I've read some of their scholarly work, but I wouldn't call it definitive, as it doesn't add up--it's more of a promise and a request for faith.
Thanks again for all the feedback, and I hope I'm not stepping out of bounds, but to have a proper discussion of string theory, it seems we would need to start with string theory's central postualtes, which would be in a definitive paper somewhere.
Thanks!