I think that Road to Reality deserves several videos, and that you would be doing us a favor by going through this volume. I own the book, but I haven't had time yet to work through it.
1. A Brief History of Time 2. Cosmology: A Very Short Introduction 3. A Universe from Nothing: Why There Is Something Rather than Nothing 4. The Fabric of the Cosmos: Space, Time, and the Texture of Reality 5. The Elegant Universe: Superstrings, Hidden Dimensions, and the Quest for the Ultimate Theory 6. The Biggest Ideas in the Universe: Space, Time, and Motion 7. Dark Matter and Dark Energy: The Hidden 95% of the Universe (Hot Science) 8. Geometry, Relativity and the Fourth Dimension 9. Cosmology’s Century: An Inside History of Our Modern Understanding of the Universe 10. Cycles of Time: An Extraordinary New View of the Universe 11. The Road to Reality: A Complete Guide to the Laws of the Universe
Pages 655-772 of Roger Penrose's book are the ones I read the most. I'm continuously cross-referencing this book with additional sources, including arXiv, physical letter reviews, NATURE, IOPscience, Springer, Elsevier, and Science Direct. He is extremely skeptical of cosmic inflation, but he is doing so from an empirical and inferential perspective, therefore that is acceptable. I suscribed by the way and added this video to my Theoretial Physics Playlist and my Quantum Cosmology Playlist. Thank you for existing.
Thank you for the nice comment Chavis! I’ve been a subscriber of yours for quite some time, so it’s nice to see you here. I like the page selection you have there. His treatment of QFT and early universe cosmology is so eloquent and I truly appreciate it now that I can digest the material.
These Pre-Big-Bang models could be proven within a confidence interval of 5σ with interferometers, cryogenics, bolometers, particle accelerators, charge-coupled devices, supercomputers, & artificial intelligence. 1. Quantum Fluctuations tunneling out of a false vacuum state to another vacuum state due to bubble nucleation, thereby causing the Big Bang. 2. String Gas Cosmology, in which an unstable hot gas of strings and generic string vacua in a quasi-static universe preceded the Big Bang due to nonsingular & ekpyrotic scenarios. 3. The Hartle-Hawking no-boundary Proposal, in which the causality in pre-big bang universes and the arrow of time points in one direction throughout the spacetime and is a 'de Sitter state' near a saddle-point of the potential. 4. Roger Penrose's Conformal cyclic cosmology, in which there was a "Λ"-driven the exponential expansion of a Pre-Big Bang universe. "Λ" represents the cosmological constant and dark energy. 5. Loop quantum gravity, in which spin foams were producing a pre-big-bang branch to our current universe with black-hole remnants. I'm genuinely curious about Eric Lerner's methodology and what he has to say on the matter and whether it's empirical and inferential or non-empirical, transcendental, and anthropocentric. I'm concerned that people are masquerading personal pain, pleasure, reward, and punishment as a legitimate skepticism about the Big Bang.
I think that Road to Reality deserves several videos, and that you would be doing us a favor by going through this volume. I own the book, but I haven't had time yet to work through it.
1. A Brief History of Time
2. Cosmology: A Very Short Introduction
3. A Universe from Nothing: Why There Is Something Rather than Nothing
4. The Fabric of the Cosmos: Space, Time, and the Texture of Reality
5. The Elegant Universe: Superstrings, Hidden Dimensions, and the Quest for the Ultimate Theory
6. The Biggest Ideas in the Universe: Space, Time, and Motion
7. Dark Matter and Dark Energy: The Hidden 95% of the Universe (Hot Science)
8. Geometry, Relativity and the Fourth Dimension
9. Cosmology’s Century: An Inside History of Our Modern Understanding of the Universe
10. Cycles of Time: An Extraordinary New View of the Universe
11. The Road to Reality: A Complete Guide to the Laws of the Universe
Pages 655-772 of Roger Penrose's book are the ones I read the most. I'm continuously cross-referencing this book with additional sources, including arXiv, physical letter reviews, NATURE, IOPscience, Springer, Elsevier, and Science Direct. He is extremely skeptical of cosmic inflation, but he is doing so from an empirical and inferential perspective, therefore that is acceptable. I suscribed by the way and added this video to my Theoretial Physics Playlist and my Quantum Cosmology Playlist. Thank you for existing.
Thank you for the nice comment Chavis! I’ve been a subscriber of yours for quite some time, so it’s nice to see you here. I like the page selection you have there. His treatment of QFT and early universe cosmology is so eloquent and I truly appreciate it now that I can digest the material.
@@thecaribbeanbookworm5066 We've got to link up some time brother. Thanks for merely existing.
Here first!🎉
As always, nice!
why not mention Eric Lerners book? "the big bang never happened". Best cosmology book imo
These Pre-Big-Bang models could be proven within a confidence interval of 5σ with interferometers, cryogenics, bolometers, particle accelerators, charge-coupled devices, supercomputers, & artificial intelligence.
1. Quantum Fluctuations tunneling out of a false vacuum state to another vacuum state due to bubble nucleation, thereby causing the Big Bang.
2. String Gas Cosmology, in which an unstable hot gas of strings and generic string vacua in a quasi-static universe preceded the Big Bang due to nonsingular & ekpyrotic scenarios.
3. The Hartle-Hawking no-boundary Proposal, in which the causality in pre-big bang universes and the arrow of time points in one direction throughout the spacetime and is a 'de Sitter state' near a saddle-point of the potential.
4. Roger Penrose's Conformal cyclic cosmology, in which there was a "Λ"-driven the exponential expansion of a Pre-Big Bang universe. "Λ" represents the cosmological constant and dark energy.
5. Loop quantum gravity, in which spin foams were producing a pre-big-bang branch to our current universe with black-hole remnants.
I'm genuinely curious about Eric Lerner's methodology and what he has to say on the matter and whether it's empirical and inferential or non-empirical, transcendental, and anthropocentric. I'm concerned that people are masquerading personal pain, pleasure, reward, and punishment as a legitimate skepticism about the Big Bang.
@@ChavisvonBradfordscience if u are curious about Erics methodology then check his youtube channel LPPFusion