Today’s edition of the London Sunday Times has a review of Not Even Wrong by John Cornwell in its book review section. Cornwell is a British historian of science, based at Cambridge University.
The review is very positive and pretty much gets things right, so of course I’m quite pleased by it. It does get one thing wrong, or at least expresses it in a misleading way: David Gross is listed as an ally, which is certainly not the case as far as criticism of string theory goes (although we both agree about the string theory anthropic landscape). A more minor quibble would be with his description of the significance to Pauli of the phrase “Not Even Wrong” (it wasn’t purely a term of abuse, but also refers to the untestability of a theory). But on the whole I think Cornwell does a very good job of describing the more controversial parts of the book and what its concerns and arguments are about.
Lubos already by last night had posted his trademark ad hominem attack on the reviewer. By now, his ranting response to any one who publicly criticizes string theory or agrees with me on this topic is tediously familiar, involving launching a personal attack on their professional qualifications, then comparing them to dogs, assigning extremely low numerical values to their intelligence, etc., etc.
Cornwell expresses the opinion that
Now that Woit has thrown a wild cat among the theoreticians, we can be sure that the ruffled string-theory advocates will be preparing a rebuttal.
So far the only rebuttal to be seen is that from Lubos, who tells us that most string theorists agree with him, writing that:
Cornwell predicts that string theorists will be preparing a rebuttal to the dean of the crackpots. I am afraid that with exactly one exception, they have much more serious work to do than to talk to cranks. My simple statement that the dean of all crackpots much like John Cornwell could not become graduate students of physics today because they are unable to understand some very elementary questions about science will probably remain the only reaction.
and
Most string theorists much like most high-energy physicists in general are extremely nice people – too nice people – so they won’t say that Cornwell is a breathtaking moron in the public. But be sure that they agree with me and many of them are saying these things in between the physicists. In the public, the only question is how to explain that Cornwell is a complete idiot without making anyone upset.
Lubos claims that most of his string theory colleagues believe that I’m a crank and my arguments about the problems with string theory are not worth responding to. This may or may not be true, but even if it is, I find it hard to understand why they allow him to go on in this way, claiming that he represents their viewpoint, given the immense amount of damage he is doing to the public perception of their field. If you believe Lubos, some of his senior colleagues seem to even think it is a good idea to egg him on in what he is doing. He reports that one senior physicist sent him last weekend’s Financial Times piece, describing it as
a tendentious, malicious attack on scientists and through that on science itself
and that another “very famous physicist with more than 10,000 citations” told him:
WOW. I can’t believe the FT article. Holy Shit, the world has gone completely bananas.
Update: In case anyone is following the comment section over at Lubos’s blog about this, note that his policy there is to delete any comments from anyone he disagrees with. I wrote in a comment answering an attack on me from “LambChopofGod” which was swiftly deleted, and others have had similar experiences. Did make me sit back and think for a moment: what am I doing spending my Sunday evening responding to nasty personal attacks from some fanatical kid hiding behind the pseudonym “LambChopofGod”? This is getting very, very weird…

