Showing posts with label hyperspace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hyperspace. Show all posts

02 September 2019

Michio Kaku - Collected Quotes

"Nature is like a work by Bach or Beethoven, often starting with a central theme and making countless variations on it that are scattered throughout the symphony. By this criterion, it appears that strings are not fundamental concepts in nature." (Michio Kaku, "Hyperspace", 1995)

"No other theory known to science [other than superstring theory] uses such powerful mathematics at such a fundamental level. […] because any unified field theory first must absorb the Riemannian geometry of Einstein’s theory and the Lie groups coming from quantum field theory. […] The new mathematics, which is responsible for the merger of these two theories, is topology, and it is responsible for accomplishing the seemingly impossible task of abolishing the infinities of a quantum theory of gravity." (Michio Kaku, "Hyperspace", 1995)

"Reality has always proved to be much more sophisticated and subtle than any preconceived philosophy." (Michio Kaku, "Hyperspace", 1995)

"Remarkably, only a handful of fundamental physical principles are sufficient to summarize most of modern physics." (Michio Kaku, "Hyperspace", 1995)

"Riemann concluded that electricity, magnetism, and gravity are caused by the crumpling of our three-dimensional universe in the unseen fourth dimension. Thus a 'force' has no independent life of its own; it is only the apparent effect caused by the distortion of geometry. By introducing the fourth spatial dimension, Riemann accidentally stumbled on what would become one of the dominant themes in modern theoretical physics, that the laws of nature appear simple when expressed in higher-dimensional space. He then set about developing a mathematical language in which this idea could be expressed." (Michio Kaku, "Hyperspace", 1995)

"Scientific revolutions, almost by definition, defy common sense." (Michio Kaku, "Hyperspace", 1995)

"When Physicists speak of 'beauty' in their theories, they really mean that their theory possesses at least two essential features: 1. A unifying symmetry 2. The ability to explain vast amounts of experimental data with the most economical mathematical expressions." (Michio Kaku, "Hyperspace", 1995)

"[…] the laws of physics, carefully constructed after thousands of years of experimentation, are nothing but the laws of harmony one can write down for strings and membranes." (Michio Kaku, "Parallel Worlds: A journey through creation, higher dimensions, and the future of the cosmos", 2004)

"Chaos theory, for example, uses the metaphor of the ‘butterfly effect’. At critical times in the formation of Earth’s weather, even the fluttering of the wings of a butterfly sends ripples that can tip the balance of forces and set off a powerful storm. Even the smallest inanimate objects sent back into the past will inevitably change the past in unpredictable ways, resulting in a time paradox." (Michio Kaku, "Parallel Worlds: A journey through creation, higher dimensions, and the future of the cosmos", 2004)

"The universe is a symphony of strings, and the mind of God that Einstein eloquently wrote about for thirty years would be cosmic music resonating through eleven-dimensional hyper space." (Michio Kaku, "Parallel Worlds: A journey through creation, higher dimensions, and the future of the cosmos", 2004)

"To understand the precise point when the possible becomes the impossible, you have to appreciate and understand the laws of physics." (Michio Kaku, "The Future of the Mind: The Scientific Quest to Understand, Enhance, and Empower the Mind", 2014)

29 August 2017

Infinite and Geometry

“The knowledge of which geometry aims is the knowledge of the eternal." (Plato)

"You say that just as space consists of an infinity of contiguous points, so time is but an infinite collection of contiguous instants? Good! Consider, then, an arrow in its flight. At any instant its extremity occupies a definite point in its path. Now, while occupying this position it must be at rest there. But how can a point be motionless and yet in motion at the same time?” (Zeno)

"Time and space are divided into the same and equal divisions. Wherefore also, Zeno’s argument, that it is impossible to go through an infinite collection or to touch an infinite collection one by one in a finite time, is fallacious. For there are two senses in which the term ‘infinte’ is applied both to length and to time and in fact to all continuous things: either in regard to divisibility or in regard to number. Now it is not possible to touch things infinite as to number in a finite time, but it is possible to touch things infinite in regard to divisibility; for time itself is also infinite in this sense." (Aristotle)

“Our account does not rob mathematicians of their science, by disproving the actual existence of the infinite in the direction of increase, in the sense of the untraceable. In point of fact they do not need the infinite and do not use it. They postulate any that the finite straight line may be produced as far as they wish.” (Aristotle, Physics)

"A finite straight line can be extended indefinitely to make an infinitely long straight line." (Euclid’s postulate)

"Given a straight line and any point off to the side of it, there is, through that point, one and only one line that is parallel to the given line." (Euclid’s postulate)

"We admit, in geometry, not only infinite magnitudes, that is to say, magnitudes greater than any assignable magnitude, but infinite magnitudes infinitely greater, the one than the other. This astonishes our dimension of brains, which is only about six inches long, five broad, and six in depth, in the largest heads." (Voltaire)

“Of late the speculations about Infinities have run so high, and grown to such strange notions, as have occasioned no small scruples and disputes among the geometers of the present age. Some there are of great note who, not contented with holding that finite lines may be divided into an infinite number of parts, do yet further maintain that each of these infinitesimals is itself subdivisible into an infinity of other parts or infinitesimals of a second order, and so on ad infinitum. These I say assert there are infinitesimals of infinitesimals, etc., without ever coming to an end; so that according to them an inch does not barely contain an infinite number of parts, but an infinity of an infinity of an infinity ad infinitum of parts.” (George Berkeley, “The Principles of Human Knowledge”, 1710)

“The introduction into geometrical work of conceptions such as the infinite, the imaginary, and the relations of hyperspace, none of which can be directly imagined, has a psychological significance well worthy of examination. It gives a deep insight into the resources and working of the human mind. We arrive at the borderland of mathematics and psychology.” (John Theodore Merz, “History of European Thought in the Nineteenth Century”, 1903)
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