Thinking Big

Philip Anderson has a piece in the latest Nature entitled Thinking Big. It’s about the interpretation of quantum mechanics, and in it he claims that Fritz London was the first one to really have the right idea about the problem. Commenting on the Bohr-Einstein debates on the subject, Anderson says “In reading about these debates I have the sensation of being a small boy who spots not one, but two undressed emperors.” Instead of the Bohr or Einstein positions, Anderson promotes a point of view he attributes to London, who wrote a paper about it in 1939 with Edmond Bauer. He says “Taking London’s point of view, one immediately begins to realize that the real problem of quantum measurement is not in understanding the simple electron being measured, but the large and complicated apparatus used to measure it” and that “The message is that what is needed is an understanding of the macroscopic world in terms of quantum mechanics.”

I take Anderson’s point to be that the classical physics of a measuring apparatus is an “emergent phenomenon”, and understanding this is the real problem of interpreting quantum mechanics. He ends with his favorite slogan: “more is different!”.

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Into the Swampland

Last month Cumrun Vafa gave a talk at Stony Brook entitled The Swamp Surrounding the Landscape. Tonight he has a new paper on the arXiv entitled The String Landscape and the Swampland. Vafa appears to be suggesting that, faced with the huge landscape of possible string vacua and the attendant inability of string theory to predict anything about physics, the thing to do is not to abandon string theory, but to head off into the even larger “swampland” of effective field theories that may or may not correspond to string theory vacua. He gives various arguments for why certain effective field theories may not correspond to string theories, but most of these are just something like “the string theory constructions we have looked at so far can’t give this kind of effective field theory”. Since one still doesn’t know what string theory really is, one probably can’t do much better than this. He also assumes that the rank of the cohomology groups of Calabi-Yau threefolds is bounded, which is a conjecture that at least some algebraic geometers don’t believe in.

Throughout his article, Vafa assumes that string theory must be true, asking “how” it will connect to experiment, not “whether” it will. For more than twenty years, string theorists have led particle physics deep into a swamp. It seems peculiar in the extreme that Vafa is now suggesting that, instead of hiking back out of the swamp to dry land, particle theorists should push on deeper into the swampland.

Update: Lubos Motl has a posting about the Vafa paper. It includes the news that Andy Strominger
believes that the program has two basic flaws: the conjectures are trivially correct in every theory of quantum gravity independently of string theory; and moreover they are wrong.

Some of my commenters claim that what Vafa is doing is designed to make string theory falsifiable. I don’t see this, and Vafa doesn’t make this claim himself. This seems to me an example of a common phenomenon. People take a string theory paper that already is going way out on a limb with not very solid arguments, then make a wild extrapolation that goes far beyond what the author claims and use this to promote the importance of the paper in a completely unjustifiable fashion.

To falsify string theory along these lines, one would have to show that it can’t lead to the standard model as an effective low energy theory. Vafa doesn’t claim this is conceivable, and his arguments can’t possibly do this. Most of the examples he gives of effective theories that may not be low energy limits of a string theory are gauge theories of high rank. It’s certainly conceivable that one can argue for something like a bound on the rank of the effective field theory gauge group if it comes from string theory, but there’s absolutely no reason to believe that such an argument can rule out the rank 4 case we care about (SU(3)xSU(2)xU(1)). I suppose one can argue that, if say Vafa can show the rank must be less than 500, and the LHC discovers a new gauge theory sector with rank 501, string theory would be falsified. But that’s kind of like saying that string theory is falsifiable, because if dragons emerge from the LHC interaction regions, string theory would be wrong.

Update: Jacques Distler also has a posting about the Vafa paper. He says he’ll wager that it is “far, far from true” that “‘anything’ is realizable somewhere on the Landscape”, and that “we will learn much” if we investigate this swamp. He doesn’t explain why it’s a good idea for the particle theory community to enter this swamp to investigate it carefully.

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Seed Magazine

The science magazine Seed is being relaunched, and the first issue of its new incarnation is now on the newsstands. Their motto is “Science is Culture”, and Clifford Johnson over at Cosmic Variance has an enthusiastic appreciation of what they are doing. The magazine is strikingly attractive, with impressive photography and graphics. One photo essay pairs photos with important equations.

There’s a piece by Lisa Randall promoting her recent work with Andreas Karch on what she calls the “relaxation principle”. I guess this is meant to be a sort of vacuum selection principle, contrasted to the “anthropic principle”. In her Seed article she describes what she is doing as follows :

The challenge for physicists, and the problem I tackle in my own work, is find all possible qualitatively different universes — and to search for principles that determine which of these universes is most likely to exist.

Unfortunately there seem to be an infinite variety of possible such universes, and examining them all could easily take up the efforts of all particle theorists for the next few centuries. There’s zero evidence for any sort of vacuum selection principle that will pick out the standard model from this infinite array of possibilities, so setting out on this path means probably abandoning any hope for ever explaining much of anything about particle physics. Karch and Randall try to give an argument for why there are 3 space dimensions, ending up with an argument for the survival of both 3 and 7 dimensional branes if one starts out with branes of all dimensions. This is a very, very long way from getting any non-trivial information about particle physics.

This issue of the magazine also has a short piece entitled “A New Force? How blogs are revolutionizing physics” by Joshua Roebke, an ex-string cosmology graduate student who now works at Seed. Joshua devotes a sizable part of his piece to telling about “Not Even Wrong” and some of the effects it has been having. Earlier this summer I had lunch with him here in New York and was encouraged to see that Seed has someone on staff with a good theoretical physics background.

Update: Lubos Motl also has a posting about the new Seed magazine. He comments on the Karch-Randall “relaxation principle”, saying that he “kind of worked on it”, but

frankly, I don’t really believe it – because of the devil hiding in the details that just don’t seem to work – much like many other proposals that have appeared in recent years.

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And I Thought My Office Was Bad…

Via For God, for Country and for Your Name Here, it seems that Alan Guth had the winning entry in a Boston contest for the messiest office. He won an office make-over, check out the before and after photographs.

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Dirac’s Hidden Geometry

There’s an interesting article by Graham Farmelo in last week’s Nature, entitled Dirac’s Hidden Geometry. Most people think of Dirac as a brilliant algebraist, but he himself claimed that his motivations and way of thinking were much more geometrical than algebraic. Farmelo’s article contains an amusing account of how Roger Penrose tried to get Dirac to explain how projective geometry had influenced his work in quantum mechanics. Dirac gave a talk about this at Boston University in 1972, but, after giving a presentation about projective geometry, stopped before explaining the relation to quantum mechanics. Penrose, the moderator, asked Dirac about the relation to quantum mechanics, and in answer “Dirac gave his trademark shake of the head, and declined to speak.”

Several historians of science have tried to figure out what Dirac’s geometrical motivations were. This question is dealt with in Olivier Darrigol’s very interesting book (which is now available on-line) From c-numbers to q-numbers: The Classical Analogy in the History of Quantum Theory. The material about Dirac and projective geometry is in chapter XI. On the same topic, there’s also an article by Peter Galison published in 2000 in the journal Representations, entitled The Suppressed Drawing: Paul Dirac’s Hidden Geometry.

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2005 Physics Nobel Prize

After my initial success last year, I’ve retired from the business of predicting who will get Nobel prizes. This year’s physics prize will be announced in less than two weeks, on Tuesday, October 4. Anyone else want to make a prediction?

Last year there was a Nobel Prize Market, but it doesn’t seem to be in operation this year.

For the last few years Thomson Scientific has been issuing Nobel prize predictions based on citation counts. They’re not doing very well in physics, basically because every year they predict it will be Green, Schwarz and Witten. This year’s prediction is here. In 2003 they rather petulantly commented:

Most observers believe the Nobel Prize will not be awarded for theoretical work. If, however, citations reflect real influence and prizes ought to be awarded for influential work, the Nobel Committee should consider recognizing string theory and M theory, whose leading figures have been Green and Schwarz, the pioneers, and Witten, who extended their work. Witten, it should be noted, is the most-cited physicist of last two decades.

Their idea that the Nobel prize is not awarded for theoretical work is kind of strange, and wrong. Last year’s award was to theorists. The people at Thomson seem to not be able to tell the difference between theoretical work that is confirmed by experiment, and work which isn’t. So far the Nobel committee seems to be able to make that distinction, and doesn’t just count citations. Presumably this will still hold true for this year. While I won’t predict who will get the prize, I will predict that Green and Schwarz won’t get it, and if Witten does, it won’t be for his work on string or M-theory.

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Jaron Lanier’s Review of The Road to Reality

A correspondent points out to me that the latest issue of American Scientist has a wonderful review of Roger Penrose’s new book The Road to Reality by computer scientist, author, artist, etc. Jaron Lanier, much better than my own effort along these lines. Despite not being a theoretical physicist, Lanier does a great job of recognizing and explaining what is great about Penrose’s book. He also is dead-on about string theory (“mob mentality”, “pompous triumphalism”).

The same issue of American Scientist also has a very good review by Lee Smolin of Gravity’s Shadow: The Search For Gravitational Waves by Harry Collins. It also contains a nowhere near as good review by yours truly of Sneaking a Look at God’s Cards, a book about interpretational issues in quantum mechanics by Giancarlo Ghirardi.

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Dangling Particles

Lisa Randall has an Op-Ed piece in today’s New York Times entitled Dangling Particles. The title seems to have little to do with the piece, but I suppose it is a play on words on “dangling participle”, a term for a sort of faulty grammar. Randall’s topic is the difficulty of communicating scientific topics, and her comments on the problems caused by scientist’s different use of words and by the complex nature of much science are true enough and unobjectionable.

But I still find the sight of a string theorist lecturing the public on how to properly understand science to be a bit jarring. Randall tries to claim that the difference between the colloquial usage of the word “theory” and the way it is used by scientists is a source of problems with the public understanding of science. She writes

For physicists, theories entail a definite physical framework embodied in a set of fundamental assumptions about the world that lead to a specific set of equations and predictions – ones that are borne out by successful predictions.

Yet she keeps on referring to “string theory”, although the subject is distinctly lacking in specific equations and predictions (she does note that “theories aren’t necessarily shown to be correct or complete immediately”, but the problem with string “theory” is not that we don’t know whether it is correct or complete, but that it isn’t really a theory, rather a hope that one exists).

Instead of devoting their time to writing for the public about the scientific status of issues that they’re not really experts in (e.g. global warming), it seems to me that string theorists would do better to first address the outbreak of pseudo-science now taking place in their own subject. When the intelligent design people get around to noticing how much of the highest level of research in one of the traditionally most prestigious sciences is now being conducted without any concern for falsifiability or traditional norms of what is science and what isn’t, the fallout is not going to be pretty.

Update: Sean Carroll has a posting about the Randall Op-Ed piece over at Cosmic Variance. He quotes approvingly Randall’s claim that Intelligent Designers don’t make a distinction between the colloquial usage of “theory”, meaning an idea not necessarily better grounded than a hunch, and the way real scientists use the term. As for whether string theory deserves to be called a “theory”, here’s a quote from Gerard ‘t Hooft (from his book In Search of the Ultimate Building Blocks):

Actually, I would not even be prepared to call string theory a “theory� rather a “model� or not even that: just a hunch. After all, a theory should come together with instructions on how to deal with it to identify the things one wishes to describe, in our case the elementary particles, and one should, at least in principle, be able to formulate the rules for calculating the properties of these particles, and how to make new predictions for them. Imagine that I give you a chair, while explaining that the legs are still missing, and that the seat, back and armrest will perhaps be delivered soon; whatever I did give you, can I still call it a chair?

Update: Lubos Motl has some comments about Randall’s Op-Ed piece and about my posting. As usual, I come in for a fair amount of abuse, but at least this time I’m in good company (‘t Hooft’s views are characterized as “just silly”).

Update:John Baez points out that the article is now up at the Edge web-site. Over at Pharyngula, there’s a posting about Danged physicists. Evidently biologists are not amused at all about Randall’s comments about evolutionary biology. They seem to think that string theorists are arrogant and prone to going on about things they don’t really understand.

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Serge Lang 1927-2005

I just heard that mathematician Serge Lang passed away this past Monday. Lang was a well-known number theorist and algebraist, a member of Bourbaki and recipient of the 1960 AMS Cole Prize. He was a professor here in the Columbia math department for fifteen years, leaving in 1972 for Yale, where he spent the rest of his career. Lang was an amazingly prolific author of mathematics textbooks, and famous for his outspoken views and “files” on various controversies. In recent years some of these had become increasingly cranky, especially on the topic of AIDS. He was truly one of the most remarkable characters of the mathematics research community.

Update: There’s an obituary at the Yale Daily News (thanks to David Goss for pointing this out).

Update: The New York Times ran an obituary of Lang today.

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How Much Mathematics Does A Theoretical Physicist Need To Know?

Mathematician Dave Morrison is giving a colloquium talk tomorrow at the KITP with the provocative title How Much Mathematics Does A Theoretical Physicist Need To Know? It should soon be available for viewing on the KITP web-site, and I’m looking forward to seeing what he has to say.

I’m not at all sure myself how much mathematics a theoretical physicist needs to know, it certainly depends on what they’re trying to do. But there does seem to me to be a well-defined list of what mathematics goes into our current most fundamental physical theories, and anyone who hopes to work on extending these should start by learning these subjects, which include (besides the classical mathematical physics of PDE’s, Fourier analysis, complex analysis):

Riemannian geometry
More general geometry of principal and vector bundles: connection, curvature, etc.
Spinor geometry
Lie groups and representation theory
deRham cohomology

I’m sure others have different ideas about this….

Update: Dave Morrison’s talk is now on-line here. He began his talk my noting that it had been advertised here on “Not Even Wrong”, and he put up a slide of my posting and people’s comments as an example of people’s lists of what mathematics theoretical physicists should know. He did say that that his talk wasn’t intended to provide such a list, but rather various comments about how physicists can fruitfully interact with mathematicians.

He began by giving several examples of people who had to construct new mathematics to do physics: Newton, Fourier, Heisenberg, and Gell-Mann. David Gross correctly objected that SU(3) representation theory was already known before Gell-Mann started using it, even though at first Gell-Mann wasn’t aware of this. As for more recent interactions, he mainly mentioned the connection between the index theorem and anomalies, as well as various math related to the quantum hall effect. For some reason he decided not to go into the relation of string theory and mathematics, which has been quite fruitful. He did say that he still believes there is some unknown more fundamental way of thinking about string theory that will involve now unknown mathematics. His general advice to physicists was that they should be willing to acquire mathematical tools as needed, but should be aware that if they ask a mathematician questions, they are likely to get answers of too great generality. He ended his talk early, opening the floor to a long discussion.

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