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12+ Works 3,431 Members 57 Reviews 8 Favorited

About the Author

Lee Smolin is a theoretical physicist who is a founding and senior faculty member at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics. He is the author of five books, including The Trouble with Physics and Time Reborn.

Includes the names: Lee Smolin, Ли Смолин

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Works by Lee Smolin

Associated Works

The Oxford Book of Modern Science Writing (2008) — Contributor — 824 copies, 6 reviews
What Is Your Dangerous Idea? Today's Leading Thinkers on the Unthinkable (1914) — Contributor — 644 copies, 8 reviews
The Next Fifty Years: Science in the First Half of the Twenty-first Century (2002) — Contributor — 390 copies, 9 reviews
The New Humanists: Science at the Edge (2003) — Contributor — 233 copies

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Reviews

This is not the easiest book to describe. I really enjoyed the author's criticisms of how modern physics is done, especially string theory and how it's become basically undisprovable because of how broad and multifaced they have made it rather than because of the theory behind it. While this book is probably understandable to those who don't have much of a physics education, it can be quite dense and dry at times which I don't think I was as in the mood for as I could have been
 
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TheAceOfPages | 28 other reviews | Dec 22, 2024 |
Smolin neatly explains properties the theory of everything must have and the logical necessities of having the observer be a part of the system (Topos logic?). And this is the first thing in my (limited) reading stating that both time and space are quantized. Spin networks which describe spacetime as graphs is also worth digging into.
 
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Castinet | 8 other reviews | Dec 11, 2022 |
From my perspective as an engineer with a PhD who never found a place in the "establishment" (R1 university, national lab), any critical take on academic science is sorely necessary. I know this isn't an ivory tower takedown as much as a critique on physics research in general, but I found it great, even though it's 16 years old.

While I'm not sure exactly how physics research has advanced in those 16 years (other than the experimental evidence of the Higgs Boson, which I feel like most people are aware of), my intuition leads me to believe that the beauty and elegance of string theory / theories have not advanced our understanding of the universe any more than it had when the book was first published. An updated edition with an additional chapter would be great for those of us not keeping up with scientific advances in the field.

Generally a great look into a theory I've always been deeply skeptical of, and a scientific system that is deeply flawed. You definitely do not need any physics background to read this book, although basic physics knowledge would likely make it much more approachable. I appreciated Smolin's ability to make the topic accessible.

Bonus: if you want to make this book into a drinking game, take a shot every time the author says something to the effect of "I have nothing but the utmost respect for my colleagues in string theory, but..." (At one point I laughed out loud when the version of this statement was along the lines of "but some of my best friends are string theorists!")
… (more)
½
 
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lemontwist | 28 other reviews | Mar 28, 2022 |

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Works
12
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Rating
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