What's wrong with physics? | Sabine Hossenfelder

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июн 2024
  • Sabine Hossenfelder lays out her plan to regain physics' reputation.
    Watch the full talk at iai.tv/video/what-is-wrong-wi...
    After 40 years of stagnation, the truth is now undeniable: physics is failing. Acclaimed physicist Sabine Hossenfelder lays out her plan to regain the once great reputation of physics.
    #SabineHossenfelder #quantummechanics #scientificmethod
    Sabine Hossenfelder is an author and theoretical physicist who researches quantum gravity. She is a Research Fellow at the Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies where she leads the Superfluid Dark Matter group.
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Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @sanjivgupta1418
    @sanjivgupta1418 3 года назад +174

    One of the reason for a 'newer' theory coming every fortnight is that in many countries salaries, promotions, funding and career opportunities are too dependent on number of publications rather than on quality of work. If this is the trend you can put forth as many unfounded fancy theories as you wish.

    • @Familia_nepal_nepal_do_mal12
      @Familia_nepal_nepal_do_mal12 3 года назад +18

      Thats a problem of any country I guess. The "publish or perish" phylosophy is problem that I thought would be addressed in her speech.

    • @trucid2
      @trucid2 3 года назад +23

      When people get paid to write papers it should come as no surprise that we get a lot of papers.

    • @horsthartmut7774
      @horsthartmut7774 3 года назад +3

      You probably understood statistics. : )

    • @superchuck3259
      @superchuck3259 3 года назад +5

      Grants for Scifi stories!

    • @williamgregory3786
      @williamgregory3786 2 года назад

      I l

  • @paulmcquown196
    @paulmcquown196 2 года назад +83

    I really appreciate Sabine taking these issues and addressing in this public forum. I once was a rocket scientist and in those days paying a lot more attention to the developments going on in physics through the people I had direct professional contact with. Most of those people are dead and the ones that not I have lost track of, regrettably. So Sabine with her series on pretty much everything fills the intellectual vacuum in my life. Thank you so much Sabine, your wonderful!

    • @JessicaSunlight
      @JessicaSunlight Год назад

      Rocket maaaan! 🚀

    • @TheEisel
      @TheEisel Год назад +1

      Theoretical rocket science have taken a turn for the worse, in large part due to the turbo encabulator and inverted digital control systems.

  • @kellensarien9039
    @kellensarien9039 3 года назад +86

    The lack of progress in fundamental physics in the last few decades is rivaled only by the noise and tumult physicists create when they have a new idea - a new idea that is just as much of an untestable dead end as all the older new ideas. This is especially noteworthy in the pages of New Scientist, of which I am a subscriber. Every third issue has a cover story on some startling theory that will overturn all that we think we know about fundamental reality. None of these ideas have gone anywhere in the 23 years I have been a subscriber. Physics used to be exploration; then it turned into a profession; now it is a racket.

    • @JPREEDY77
      @JPREEDY77 Год назад

      Is this why I want to kick Neil in the balls? Physicists are smart ass physical science teachers trying to sell you snake oil "in theory" based off of an idea. Convincing me to go to camp so someone can touch me. To this point, not one physicist is brave enough to admit that all they have ever accomplished is the ability to "View" atoms. Which is a feat we were bound to accomplish given the microscope. Control input = control output, means we must measure. Even the atomic bomb is not a physics thing as much as it is an ability we have learned to see an object, evaluate it's ability to output energy to light the cave or heat the vienna sausages. Beyond the "airbag" that physics is, we are all physicists because the only value in the way it works is that if you hit you head on the wall really really hard, it's bad.

    • @JonasPauloNegreiros
      @JonasPauloNegreiros Год назад +18

      New Scientist is an excellent Sci-Fi Magazine.

    • @stevenwheeler4198
      @stevenwheeler4198 Год назад

      2004 - Isolation and characterization of graphene
      2008 - 16-year study of stellar orbits around Sagittarius_A* provide strong evidence for a supermassive black hole at the centre of the Milky Way galaxy
      2009 - Planck begins observations of cosmic microwave background
      2012 - Higgs boson found by the Compact Muon Solenoid[5] and ATLAS[6] experiments at the Large Hadron Collider
      2015 - Gravitational waves are observed
      2019 - First image of a Black hole
      2020 - The first room-temperature superconductor identified

    • @kellensarien9039
      @kellensarien9039 Год назад +6

      @@stevenwheeler4198 These are confirmations of previously-proposed models, not fundamental theoretical advances. Where are new models and their experimental support? Where are the extensions of the Standard Model? What about supersymmetry? How's that working out at LHC? What is dark matter, what is dark energy? Compare your list with physics in the period 1900 - 1920. Given the cost of high-energy physics, it is understandable that physicists would want to give the impression of stunning fundamental progress, but they are not fooling anyone.

    • @stevenwheeler4198
      @stevenwheeler4198 Год назад +7

      @@kellensarien9039 That's a fair point. Progress is not as quick as it was between 1900 and 1920, but to take your example of dark matter; we've gone from not knowing it existed, to being able to measure how much of it there should be, to having different candidates to explain it, to being able to measure the distribution of dark matter in colliding galaxies. It's certainly not settled but to say we have made no progress in recent years is a stretch.

  • @Familia_nepal_nepal_do_mal12
    @Familia_nepal_nepal_do_mal12 3 года назад +113

    lovely and very important talk, I have one thing that I thought would be addressed by Sabine but it didn't. It is the "publish or perish" phylosophy, it leads to a lot of junk science, waste of resources and academic polution. Great minds could be better channeled fueling more important work instead of competing for funding, career opportunities and resources.

    • @YaPingWong
      @YaPingWong 3 года назад +11

      "publish or perish" philosophy has resulted "publish and perish" for many researchers and institutions.

    • @SI-kn5iq
      @SI-kn5iq 3 года назад +8

      Absolutely right. Not just in fundamental science, in applied sciences, this "publish or perish" culture has wrecked havoc especially in medical science and environment.

    • @TerryJLaRue
      @TerryJLaRue 3 года назад +13

      You couldn't be more correct. Sabine covers that aspect very well in her book "Lost In Math". Peer approval is more important than progress. "Beauty" is more important than truth.

    • @alloomis1635
      @alloomis1635 3 года назад +1

      sorry, we all scrabble for whatever prizes please, and seem within reach. can't see an alternative, maybe a license to practice particle physics through examination? but who writes the questions, and measures the answers?

    • @beautifulcrazy
      @beautifulcrazy 3 года назад +2

      Amen!

  • @bobmcgrath1272
    @bobmcgrath1272 2 года назад +64

    One of the most intriguing and intellectually honest videos I’ve seen for some time.
    Bravo ma’am!

    • @ThePurza
      @ThePurza Год назад +5

      She's great isn't she. I think she's in her element when she is less prepared like this, she seems more wooden on her YT channel. Like maybe whoever directs that channel should see these and let her do her thing.

    • @BeKindToBirds
      @BeKindToBirds Год назад +2

      I like to characterize her work as "grounding" all of the head I the clouds ideas and ensuring that our feet remain firmly on the ground.
      Her popular rise shows just how much the popular ideas that became disconnected got traction and needed grounding I think. Her voice is a great boon to physics at this time.

    • @everythingisalllies2141
      @everythingisalllies2141 Год назад

      But Sabine is in the business of spreading pseudoscience. She is perpetuating a pack of lies. She constantly fails to target the big lies of Physics, and actually reinforces the BS. Her part is to play the rebel professor, but she doesnt actually discuss the actual issues.

  • @roger_isaksson
    @roger_isaksson 2 года назад +120

    What’s wrong with physics in one sentence:
    *Careers depend on it*
    🤣👍

    • @peterjones6507
      @peterjones6507 2 года назад

      Got in one!

    • @frankdimeglio8216
      @frankdimeglio8216 2 года назад

      Hossenfelder is not a genius. She is chameleonic. She is political. She is maximum money making agenda "physics". Einstein was a weasel. FACTS

    • @frankdimeglio8216
      @frankdimeglio8216 2 года назад +1

      REAL PHYSICS:
      WHY AND HOW THE CLEAR, THEORETICAL, AND TRUE PROOF OF THE ULTIMATE UNIFICATION REGARDING PHYSICS/PHYSICAL EXPERIENCE IS F=MA AS E=MC2: That SPACE is THEORETICALLY, ultimately, truly, and FUNDAMENTALLY QUANTUM GRAVITATIONAL is proven by the CLEAR fact that E=mc2 IS F=ma. This CLEARLY explains the term c4 from Einstein's field equations (regarding his general theory of gravitation). Gravity AND ELECTROMAGNETISM/energy are linked AND BALANCED opposites, AS E=MC2 IS F=MA; AS ELECTROMAGNETISM/energy is gravity. Great. Time DILATION ULTIMATELY proves ON BALANCE that E=mc2 IS F=ma, AS ELECTROMAGNETISM/energy is gravity. This NECESSARILY represents, INVOLVES, AND DESCRIBES what is possible/potential AND actual IN BALANCE. The MIDDLE DISTANCE in/of SPACE AND the FULL DISTANCE in/of SPACE are thus NECESSARILY LINKED and BALANCED, AS E=mc2 IS F=ma; AS ELECTROMAGNETISM/energy is gravity. TIME is necessarily possible/potential AND actual IN BALANCE, AS E=mc2 IS F=ma; AS ELECTROMAGNETISM/ENERGY IS GRAVITY. (Very importantly, outer "space" involves full inertia; AND it is fully invisible AND black.) BALANCE and completeness go hand in hand. It ALL CLEARLY makes perfect sense. Great !!! INSTANTANEITY is thus FUNDAMENTAL to what is the FULL and proper UNDERSTANDING of physics/physical experience, AS E=mc2 IS F=ma; AS ELECTROMAGNETISM/energy is gravity. "Mass"/ENERGY IS GRAVITY. Gravity IS ELECTROMAGNETISM/energy. CLEARLY, I have mathematically, sensibly, and THEORETICALLY unified physics/physical experience; as E=mc2 is CLEARLY proven to constitute what is F=ma ON BALANCE. Gravity/acceleration involves BALANCED inertia/INERTIAL RESISTANCE, AS E=mc2 IS F=ma; AS ELECTROMAGNETISM/energy is gravity. GRAVITATIONAL force/ENERGY IS proportional to (or BALANCED with/as) inertia/INERTIAL RESISTANCE, as E=mc2 IS F=ma; AS ELECTROMAGNETISM/ENERGY IS GRAVITY. The stars AND PLANETS are POINTS in the night sky. GREAT !!! Energy has/involves GRAVITY, AND ENERGY has/involves inertia/INERTIAL RESISTANCE. It ALL CLEARLY makes perfect sense. E=mc2 IS F=ma. Very carefully consider what is THE MAN who IS standing on what is the EARTH/ground. E=mc2 IS F=ma. GREAT !!! By Frank DiMeglio

    • @alexstewart8097
      @alexstewart8097 2 года назад +1

      Still we need more of the Real Physics and Engineering, because the Chinese are playing for keeps...Shema!!!

    • @simesaid
      @simesaid 2 года назад +3

      I take it you believe the remedy to be that physicists should all be unpaid volunteers? I mean, that _is_ what you mean, isn't it? That's your solution? Or is it something else, because I'd love to hear it!

  • @nHans
    @nHans 3 года назад +13

    As an engineer, I have a different perspective on why physicists tend to choose theories that are 'beautiful,' 'simple,' or 'elegant.' We engineers use a lot of empirical, experimentally-derived data in our work. (Science hasn't advanced enough to predict these values from first principles.) We try to fit curves to the data points, because of course it's easier to work with equations.
    Now there are literally an infinite number of equations that can fit a finite number of data points. We need just one. So how do we go about choosing it? We don't use 'beauty' as a specific criterion-it's ill-defined and too subjective. However, we do use several other criteria: Simplicity, usability, generality, flexibility, accuracy, range, well-researched, computable etc. Those so inclined could indeed summarize these criteria as 'beauty.'

    • @tomctutor
      @tomctutor Год назад +1

      A scientists decides on/selects a particular model, e.g. General Relativity. They then create the mathematical formalism, test their model though its predictive capability. If it works and supported by the raw data then that's good enough. A lot of ideas in pure physics are born from concepts of symmetry. We "assume" that nature is symmetrical in any particular frame, then suggest a law that encodes that symmetry. That's where a lot of the Standard Model comes from. If you really want to model a set of measurements you could simply use regression and fit an arbitrary polynomial, thats what engineers do I suggest, is it linear, quadratic whatever, good enough for its purpose.

    • @Heartsjmc
      @Heartsjmc Месяц назад

      ​@@tomctutornot a scientist but everytime you say nature is symmetrical something in me cringes

    • @tomctutor
      @tomctutor Месяц назад

      @@Heartsjmc Just look in a mirror, what do you see regarding your body?

  • @mickmccrohon
    @mickmccrohon 2 года назад +42

    It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is, it doesn't matter how smart you are. If it doesn't agree with experiment, it's wrong.
    Richard P. Feynman

    • @mickmccrohon
      @mickmccrohon Год назад +1

      @ANSH LALWANI he certainly did.

    • @IvanMectin
      @IvanMectin Год назад +2

      @Scaggs 😂 Do I listen to the great mind of Feynman or Scaggs 🤔 This is why Science has become a joke.
      Dark Energy 73% ish What's the correct %? What is it? How do you test it?
      Dark Matter 27% ish What's the correct %? What is it? How do you test it?
      What's % left? What's Gravity?
      Silly made up theories to try and cover for the failed maths!
      Science, or should I say Maths, has too many egos and very little integrity.

    • @mickmccrohon
      @mickmccrohon Год назад +1

      @Andrew Holster or the theory is wrong.

    • @Sharperthanu1
      @Sharperthanu1 Год назад +2

      He also said that many world's interpretation is nonsense but then Brian Greene and Sean Carroll say they believe in many worlds' Interpretation so who do I believe?

    • @grandpaobvious
      @grandpaobvious Год назад +7

      @@Sharperthanu1 At some point you have to recognize that math is not reality.

  • @opdawg817
    @opdawg817 3 года назад +161

    Good to see Scientists questioning the field they specialize in rather than going with the herd and accepting unproven theories.

    • @jaywyse7150
      @jaywyse7150 3 года назад +20

      Reason I quit religion.

    • @christiansather8438
      @christiansather8438 3 года назад +2

      they need to question more deeply

    • @godtrader6102
      @godtrader6102 3 года назад +5

      You are allowed to believe things as long as you are willing to change your mind in light of new evidence which contradicts your beliefs. There is nothing wrong with holding a belief about what theory you think is correct. Usually, "going with the herd" is going with the theory that has the most evidence, so...

    • @alexsorto8100
      @alexsorto8100 3 года назад +1

      @@jaywyse7150 Existence of God is like 5% of a religion, other 95% is a collection of ideas on moral philosophy dummy

    • @gristlevonraben
      @gristlevonraben 3 года назад +4

      Dear, Op dawg, it is good to see her doing it, but sadly, the main point is that most are not. Never trust a scientist. Trust in thinkers. I think you have a good heart, I hope you gain in wisdom and good things.

  • @armandogarciajuliana2461
    @armandogarciajuliana2461 2 года назад +15

    Many theoretical physicists are like the guy who goes to the doctor:
    - Doctor, my brother thinks he is a chicken.
    - Do not worry, take him here and I will fix his mind.
    - We can’t do that, we need the eggs.

  • @jonathonjubb6626
    @jonathonjubb6626 3 года назад +12

    I'm an accountant. During my career we were expected to create results. In fact the continuation of our careers depended upon it.
    Btw all balance sheets are works of art! Interpret that as you like....

    • @MichaelBrueckner
      @MichaelBrueckner 3 года назад +1

      Tells us, you're a conventional physicist.

    • @rhoddryice5412
      @rhoddryice5412 3 года назад +2

      You’ve never considered a less dull and boring work? Like lion tamer?

    • @jonathonjubb6626
      @jonathonjubb6626 3 года назад +3

      @@rhoddryice5412 Wanted to be a pro golfer but hadn't got the nerve...

    • @rhoddryice5412
      @rhoddryice5412 3 года назад

      @@jonathonjubb6626 Try being an explorer. I don’t think anyone has ever climbed the twin peaks of Kilimanjaro.

    • @brucedanckwerts1634
      @brucedanckwerts1634 2 года назад +1

      Jonathon, Thanks for admitting that all Balance Sheets are Works of Art. A fact that needs to be more widely understood.

  • @protocol6
    @protocol6 3 года назад +7

    There are many problems that can't be solved just by putting more people on it. The computing analogy is that adding more nodes to a compute cluster (or processors in a single computer) lets you solve more problems at once but it doesn't necessarily let you solve more complex or larger problems. It can, in some cases, if you can recast the problem into relatively independent bite size pieces but that's often very hard and unintuitive.

    • @londen3547
      @londen3547 Год назад

      It seems to be a common misconception, that supercomputers are just a bunch PCs cabled together. Big difference is the complexity in design used to connect those processor cores together. One processor could access a machines entire memory space if required. Similarly one job could occupy the total available memory space if necessary. Normally a programmer would fork off as many processes as possible.

    • @argilaga
      @argilaga Год назад

      Not only that but there is the diminishing returns concept too. There is so much money flowing around nowadays that it becomes economical to have a larger number of researchers thus diminishing their threshold competence.

  • @bozo5632
    @bozo5632 3 года назад +6

    Thank you IAI for posting the complete video.

  • @AD-zo5vp
    @AD-zo5vp Год назад +4

    As much as I agree with your general point, the number of physicists increased especially in application and the amount of stuff they have to learn or can focus on has also increased exponentially. For the whole "leading astray" thing I completely agree though

  • @anest-uk
    @anest-uk 3 года назад +4

    I studied Physics at Cambridge in the 70s (Neil Turok's year). I found it upsetting even back then that physics was following a path described by philospher of science Imre Lakatos as _degenerating_ "a research programme is degenerating if the successive theories do not deliver novel predictions or if the novel predictions that they deliver turn out to be false". It seemed like the interesting problems were largely solved and the cutting edge research was far distant from what had fascinated me at school - electromagnetism, thermodynamics etc. I would have been better studying engineering or perhaps bioscience, but I did not know that then.

    • @anest-uk
      @anest-uk 3 года назад +1

      Nd incidentally dark matter and dark energy are perfect examples of what he called a "protective belt" - add-ons to balance the equations.

  • @Nivola1953
    @Nivola1953 2 года назад +9

    Thank you Sabine, I’ve never heard this argument before and find it worrying and compelling.
    I also tend to agree with many comments below that “careers” and “capitalism” ideal of making more profit i.e. money, can distort the motivation and results of research!
    Please tell us and the establishment that distributes the research money, what should be done to progress in physics, because physics really matters!

  • @NondescriptMammal
    @NondescriptMammal Год назад +3

    What an excellent synopsis of a problem that is seldom discussed openly and honestly. Great respect for Sabine for having the honesty and scientific integrity to highlight this issue in this way, instead of sweeping it under the rug as so many theoretical physicists seem all too willing to do.

  • @TheWildWord
    @TheWildWord 3 года назад +26

    Thank you Sabine I really appreciate how you had the courage to stand up and point things out among your profession that aren't working.
    These are the conversations that need to be had if we want progress. I am 100% confident that a breakthrough is right around the corner. And I know that it will be a result of your efforts pushing for whatever this may be. I also know that you will be on the front line with the skills and knowledge that you possess creating something that we humans never thought was possible.

    • @thwh77
      @thwh77 3 года назад +2

      *Sabine

    • @TheWildWord
      @TheWildWord 3 года назад +2

      @@thwh77 thank you.

    • @david203
      @david203 3 года назад +2

      Actually, many physicists stand up and point to theories that aren't working. That is exactly how physics has always worked.

    • @TheWildWord
      @TheWildWord 2 года назад +1

      @@david203 Yeah I suppose your right.

    • @jaycorrales5329
      @jaycorrales5329 Год назад

      I'm still waiting for the breakthru?

  • @wesjohnson5204
    @wesjohnson5204 3 года назад

    One thing that can help, Sabine, is that physicists often spout that mass tells space how to curve, but they should focus more on the important lesson of GR that energy density is proportional to curvature. That it does is not as important as in what proportion. Then they can at least begun to see how an emergence from a maximum energy density toward a lowering values must create a curved trajectory with the tightest coils corresponding to higher energy density. "Crisis in Cosmology" is partly based on this fundamental neglect. Thanks, very good video again!

  • @weichen219
    @weichen219 Год назад +2

    Thanks for the candid explanation of the issues of physics. It is very enlightening.

  • @devinhood7340
    @devinhood7340 3 года назад +2

    "It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is, it doesn't matter how smart you are. If it doesn't agree with experiment, it's wrong".
    Richard P. Feynman

    • @BlueGiant69202
      @BlueGiant69202 3 года назад

      You know, Dr. Feynman had a theory that wa s refuted by experiment so he questioned the experiment rather than giving up and using that quote. There is an old wuote of Einstein's where he questions experimental results as well. So how could Feynman and Einstein been so confident?

  • @yaronkl
    @yaronkl 3 года назад +3

    thank you for putting some much effort to give us such a detailed video. Much appreciated.

  • @RosaLichtenstein01
    @RosaLichtenstein01 3 года назад +1

    The link to the full talk doesn't appear to be working.

  • @LowellBoggs
    @LowellBoggs Год назад +1

    Great video, but one thing never discussed is the question of why physicists don't perceive that quantum mechanic's lack of a way to predict the timing of anything seems to be a disaster. Why don't physicists think this is a deal breaker? Time is all over newton's laws, why don't physicists require that all theories predict timing of events?

  • @pboston6RR
    @pboston6RR 3 года назад +35

    A favorite saying of mine is “Don’t confuse me with facts, my mind is made up!” seems to fit a lot of the cases you have made. Often the facts are just another set of observations made with a rather narrow view of the problem at hand.
    Thanks for your wider views.

    • @MountainFisher
      @MountainFisher 2 года назад +4

      Try that line of reasoning with Darwinism. A Chinese biologist visiting America made a rather pointed remark of our two systems. He said in China you can criticize Darwin, but not the government. In America you can criticize the government, but you cannot criticize Darwin. Do you know why?

  • @nicholasdebs1753
    @nicholasdebs1753 3 года назад +20

    To quote Marcel Duchamp--"Anything's beautiful if you look at it long enough".

    • @GregoryWonderwheel
      @GregoryWonderwheel 3 года назад +2

      I've tested this and confirmed it by staring at a tangerine. You don't just see beauty, you see how mind creates the experience of beauty

    • @joeboxter3635
      @joeboxter3635 3 года назад +3

      I said that to my wife ... she laughed and laughed and said "nice try, honey."

    • @TrakThora
      @TrakThora 3 года назад +1

      @@joeboxter3635 😅😅😅😅

    • @michael.forkert
      @michael.forkert 3 года назад

      That Duchamp was a BSh…er as well. WHAT is the meaning for “long enough”? HOW LONG is ENOUGH??

    • @philosopherhobbs
      @philosopherhobbs 3 года назад

      Try staring at feces "long enough" and let me know when you find it beautiful.

  • @malectric
    @malectric Год назад +1

    I'd be tempted to begin by taking Planck's constant as defining the smallest (measurable?) disturbance in the virtual "sea" and consider that as a fundamental building block. It is interesting for example that as a "photon/disturbance" has a shorter wavelength/higher energy one might see it slightly differently: the energy enclosed in an increasingly smaller volume as wavelength approaches Planck's Constant defines energy density rather than just energy per se. It might be interesting to see what can happen in "space" as the energy density decreases (wavelength) becomes longer from there. It might also be seen as a reason why energy required in particle accelerators have to reach ever higher energies to "create" more "massive" entities and possibly assist in explaining such entities' lifetimes.
    FWIW I've also wondered whether e.m. energy propagation through the virtual sea is a transverse wave and gravity is a longitudinal one.

  • @BB-cf9gx
    @BB-cf9gx 3 года назад +8

    I have read Lost in Math and appreciate your lectures.

  • @paulabrahams6147
    @paulabrahams6147 3 года назад +25

    An excellent presentation. All physicists should watch this.

    • @AbrarManzoor
      @AbrarManzoor 3 года назад +1

      All students should watch this physicists are not naive

    • @daveThbfusion
      @daveThbfusion 3 года назад +3

      Most physicists cannot speak so clearly.
      without having resort to theoretical particles...
      Vector equations, and a myriad of various variable/(letter soup)
      to ever make any sense to any laypeople.

    • @overtonwindowshopper
      @overtonwindowshopper 3 года назад

      They should, but they won’t.
      It’s far too “philosophical”

    • @SilhSe
      @SilhSe 3 года назад +1

      Actually some Physicist watch this, like my friend which is a cool connoisseur of content creators 😎

  • @sindarpeacheyeisacommie8688
    @sindarpeacheyeisacommie8688 3 года назад +34

    “If it’s stupid, but it works, it isn’t stupid.” -US Army Infantry maxim.

    • @mickleblade
      @mickleblade 3 года назад +5

      Oh, it can still be stupid, especially if it's US Infantry....

    • @fractalnomics
      @fractalnomics 3 года назад

      @@mickleblade well played! Patton would agree.

    • @ennisgunns
      @ennisgunns 2 года назад

      Your contribution is a quote by another. I suggest you watch again.

    • @aurelienyonrac
      @aurelienyonrac 2 года назад

      I know of too many stupid things done by the military.
      3 trucks
      One for the privates
      One for the guns
      One for the medic.
      Clean and clear.
      Problem:
      If any of the 3 trucks are destroyed, the mission is a disaster.
      French military.

    • @nestorlovesguitar
      @nestorlovesguitar 2 года назад +1

      One can use a fly swatter or a wrecking ball to kill an insect. Both work. Second option is still stupid.
      The problem with maxims is that they're almost always used as a crutch, a cop-out... instead of actually sitting down and do some real thinking.

  • @Quroxify
    @Quroxify 3 года назад +1

    Thanks you put it all together.

  • @sbonventure
    @sbonventure Год назад +1

    Great presentation! I wonder if not only should working hours be considered but also an unknown, such as increasing complexity of the problems physicists have to solve when compared to discoveries historically.

    • @HasturYellowSign
      @HasturYellowSign 11 месяцев назад

      Another issue that came to mind was the effect of desire, ambition, & passion and a wild joy. There’s a big difference between a Faraday & Maxwell versus the standard physics theorist of today in the desire to explore. That may inhibit us today without our even noticing it.

  • @andiralosh2173
    @andiralosh2173 Год назад +10

    Okay I LOVED how you described beauty as an emergent quality of discovery. A lot does look less beautiful when incomplete. As humans we like patterns of course, but if we're just chasing patterns without relation to the data, we're simply making up gobbledygook. Cheers 🥂

    • @tilmanvogel2387
      @tilmanvogel2387 Год назад +1

      Woah, I skipped some parts and missed that point! Thanks for your comment!

    • @michaelburggraf2822
      @michaelburggraf2822 Год назад +1

      Reading the term beauty in relation to a theory is triggering alarms in my head. What do we really mean with saying a theory is beautiful?
      If it's just because of a symmetry being contained possibly playing a significant role I would say that's nice but not relevant until experimental data are providing a strong confirmation. And the data shouldn't confirm just the symmetry itself but the fundamental assumptions on which a symmetry has been discovered, eg derived.
      I'd rather rely on symmetry as a well defined mathematical concept than as an asthetic one. The discovery of quasi-crystals may serve as an example of symmetries existing beyond our conventional perception of beauty. And in statistical systems like glasses or ceramics the notion of symmetry is a quite abstract and challenging one.

    • @tilmanvogel2387
      @tilmanvogel2387 Год назад +1

      @@michaelburggraf2822 "Schönheit ist Wahrheit in Freiheit" (Schiller) - if these ontological categories are truly intertwined like this, we should - when unprejudiced - find a theory beautiful if it is true (i.e., accurate or has a great explanatory power) and free (of superfluous parameters or assumptions). Ofc., this is a somewhat abstract and certainly not a conventional definition of beauty, but I for one am pretty thrilled with that approach. It certainly seems to fit the esthetic experiences mathematicians or physicists reported when finding important formulae or proofs.

    • @andiralosh2173
      @andiralosh2173 Год назад

      @@michaelburggraf2822 and @tilman vogel, you both make good points. I would however advise against absolutely dismissing the aesthetic. Aesthetics can be indicative of a greater underlying pattern worth understanding, or simply of us projecting patterns of our conceptual human scale where they don't belong.
      Einstein and many others were famously about thought experiments (as Sabine talks of often), which are highly aesthetic in mental modeling. The point however was to strip away to the roots of the model. You might call this a radical understanding of the underlying 'mechanisms', of say quantum models for example. That said, the point is that our intuition needs to be scrutinized, not endlessly lauded as some method of divining truth. Inflating hypothèses with magical thinking of additional orbitals to make the Earth the center of our solar system, is less than helpful.
      We need to constantly examine the assumptions in our thinking, and I say Sabine is right in this, that scrutiny is called for, rather than praising wild idea factories. If you produce the most ideas over decades, but the vast majority are bloated nonsense, that's in many ways worse than nothing, because it takes more time to follow than just the basics we see demonstrable experimental proof for.
      I'm all for far-out brainstorming, I do it all the time myself thinking about the universe, but why does anyone think publishing pseudoscientific sci philosophy is an okay standard? I suspect we've been corrupted by selling sensational pop sci to people who don't even understand the basics. Instead of authoring stories, 'scientist' need to do science and teach people to value scientific rigour in what is worth sharing to the broader community.

    • @AndrewWilsonStooshie
      @AndrewWilsonStooshie 11 месяцев назад

      I don't think there has to be any intrinsic beauty in any theory. The beauty comes form knowing what you have explains reality.

  • @ZappyOh
    @ZappyOh 3 года назад +99

    "Science makes progress funeral by funeral"
    -- Max Planck (according to Paul A. Samuelson)

    • @sambrandon7653
      @sambrandon7653 3 года назад

      ht..s slash slash independent dot academia dot edu slash ZDimić
      (his comments are banned on youtube)

    • @brianfitzpatrick7372
      @brianfitzpatrick7372 3 года назад

      @@sambrandon7653 why?

    • @christophermiller6100
      @christophermiller6100 3 года назад +1

      Paradigm shifts require intellectual phase locking...on both sides. Settled science is reluctant to entertain the possibility of a more efficient view.

    • @airbup
      @airbup 3 года назад +2

      Scientist will try to find whatever fits data. Don't be so condescending that they only will think of beauty.

    • @tiagorodrigues3730
      @tiagorodrigues3730 3 года назад

      @@airbup If it were true, then String Theory would have been something that happened in the 1980s and then "parked" once it was determined that we did not have then (and do not have now) the power to probe the energy scales which would prove it or disprove it. Instead, the past thirty years of ST have all been based on "beauty" (more properly symmetry) arguments. Listen to any video of Dr Susskind explaining ST and he'll talk about it himself.

  • @Cnifmacian
    @Cnifmacian 3 года назад

    Excellent presentation.

  • @markkennedy5479
    @markkennedy5479 Год назад

    It would be interesting to hear Sabine's self-assessment as to whether she has the capacity to make a ground-breaking contribution to addressing any of these problems herself. Obviously, she knows more about physics than most people and can see clearly where things don't add up. She doubtless also has a good grasp of the intractability of some of the problems, and a fairly realistic idea of her own limitations. She's a brilliant communicator: to what extent is she also an original thinker? She's intelligent enough to make a reliable assessment, and honest enough to give us an accurate report, to the extent that such self-knowledge is possible.

    • @belkyhernandez8281
      @belkyhernandez8281 Год назад

      I think I saw her comment elsewhere that she proposed some ideas at some point that challenged conventional thinking and she got the boot. So it got her on this track.

  • @rsm3t
    @rsm3t 3 года назад +10

    I don't think we should expect "more physicists = faster progress", for two reasons. First is the increase in the number of areas of specialization compared to 100 years ago. Second is that teams of physicists don't operate like massively parallel computers each working on different independent pieces of the puzzle. There's bound to be duplication of effort.
    If a dish takes 30 minutes for a chef to prepare, the same dish can't be prepared in one minute by 30 chefs.

    • @RalphDratman
      @RalphDratman 3 года назад +1

      Maybe it doesn't work with the dish and the chefs, but I read somewhere that if nine men and nine women get together with the right attitude they can make a baby in a month. They just have to think together. Think Unity.

    • @rsm3t
      @rsm3t 3 года назад

      @@RalphDratman They can make nine babies in nine months, which does work out to a baby per month.

    • @RalphDratman
      @RalphDratman 3 года назад

      @@rsm3t Except... lead time.

    • @rsm3t
      @rsm3t 3 года назад

      @@RalphDratman once the production pipeline is filled, a baby a month.

  • @danievdw
    @danievdw 3 года назад +4

    Hopefully now that Fermi labs and others have opened up additional crack in the standard model, more people will start taking a few steps back. Too many of our 'top minds' got their heads stuck so deeply in to String theory, that they become completely obsessed by it..... Hopefully this will shake enough foundations for people to free their minds.

  • @TheMg49
    @TheMg49 2 года назад

    I'm in awe of the depth and breadth of Sabine Hossenfelder's knowledge, and always enjoy and learn from just about everything she has to say about anything. Below, a few more comments:
    I don't think it's quite correct to say that particles can be in two places at the same time. There doesn't seem to me to be anything particularly weird about the quantum theory saying that a particle has a 50% chance of being found in one place and a 50% chance of being found in another place. Also doesn't seem to me to be anything particularly weird about the uncertainty relations. Also, I don't think that the 'measurement problem' is a theoretical or interpretational problem, but rather a physical problem pertaining to our instrumental capabilities. Further, it seems to me that a better approach to understanding gravitational behavior might be in terms of wave mechanics rather than the current geometrical approach of GR. That's not to say that it would be a better way to do gravitational calculations, the complexity of which would overwhelm today's computing capabilities.

  • @wells2671
    @wells2671 3 года назад +2

    So how do you fix the problem, and what should they focus on instead? I have a nephew studying physics now with a focus in astrophysics. What should he be doing/asking his professor in order to avoid these pitfalls?

    • @david203
      @david203 3 года назад +1

      There is no real urgency to fix the current crisis in physics. It is quite helpful to physics, giving lots of motivation for discovering consistent knowledge of how Nature works.

    • @tomctutor
      @tomctutor Год назад

      There is no harm being critical, but it is a two sided coin. He should learn as much as he can so that he himself can contribute, in his own way, to mankind's future. Ask him Carl Sagan's problem, how would you communicate with an advanced intelligent alien, that isn't necessarily and abstract problem! 🤔

    • @yingyang1008
      @yingyang1008 Год назад

      He should be laughing his ass off at the cult of Einstein

    • @tomctutor
      @tomctutor Год назад

      @@yingyang1008 There is no cults in pure science. There is recognition of the contribution that particular scientists have made in their field. Einstein's contribution to our modern understanding of matter, light, space and energy has been far reaching. Everything from nuclear fission to black holes can only be understood using Einstein's principles. There have been many experiments predicted and observations verifying Einstein's model (General Relativity) and never has been any contradicting it. If you know of a flaw in the equations of GR then we are all ears! Enlighten us please.🤔

  • @marcelobrinholli8201
    @marcelobrinholli8201 3 года назад +3

    I am very interested in this subject. I think there should be more studies in Philosophy of Science so as to reach a more formal definition of "beauty" in the context of scientific research and in particular, in Physics. And I have a question: the pursue for solving inconsistencies in theories isn't itself a beauty-driven effort?

    • @tilmanvogel2387
      @tilmanvogel2387 Год назад

      I think so. I share this old believe that beauty is interdependent with goodness and truth. What do you think of this idea: the understanding of beauty has to evolve. Think biology. Nature seems to have the rule to do as much as possible (multitude of forms) with as little as possible (few basic elements). Think fractal maths - make endless forms from a little equation with a feedback loop. Isn't that like Ockham's razor? Like, we want our theories simple, yet able to accurately describe a lot of phenomena.

    • @ochjim
      @ochjim Год назад

      As an interested layman I'd hope that investigating and resolving inconsistences isn't a beauty driven effort to even the slightest degree. It should simply and only be about resolving the inconsistencies, ie about nothing more than solving the problem without preconceptions about how the explanation should relate to conceptions of "beauty" (symmetry or whatever)..

    • @tilmanvogel2387
      @tilmanvogel2387 Год назад

      @@ochjim I agree - if we're talking *preconceptions* of beauty. The way I mean it, though, the motivation for 'resolving' anything is practically the same as wanting beauty. Like, truth in itself is beautiful, at least relative to falsehood. The strive for both beauty and truth requires becoming aware of one's preconceptions.

    • @ochjim
      @ochjim Год назад

      @@tilmanvogel2387 - hi. Thanks for replying. I agree with your last sentence in relation to scientific accuracy/sound theorising: their pursuit requires awareness of our prejudices/preconceptions. Eureka moments when the answer to some intractable maths or physics problem is discovered may sometimes conjure in some of us us the same kind of sensation we experience when we see /hear something we regard as beautiful, so yes I can go along with that to a degree, in some cases. But in the final analysis beauty is something we experience subjectively and personally. And then, from that, there's the problem of defining beauty. it seems that we all know what it is when it strikes us, but in itself it isn't so easy to identify objectively.

    • @marcelobrinholli8201
      @marcelobrinholli8201 Год назад

      Thank you guys for your thoughts. The debate reflects exactly my concerns. Beauty is still a very subjective concept. "I can't define it but I know when I see it" is very common in mundane discussions and even in philosophical ones (actually this assertion was even used by a politician in defining porn :)). But I think Philosophy, and Physics in particular (as an effort to study and describe reality as objectively as possible) deserve better.

  • @scene2much
    @scene2much 3 года назад +13

    The static state of fundamental physics may be motivation enough to suggest the next significant change in fundamental physics is not so beautiful, based on our current theoretical aesthetics. What appears ugly, may, with a mature appreciation, become beautiful.
    Also, an ugly theory may be only transiently so. A key modification may add new power, and a later modification may restore symmetry about newly realized axes.

    • @adamwhiteson6866
      @adamwhiteson6866 2 года назад

      To paraphrase Sabine, if it accurately describes nature, that in itself is beauty.

  • @pedrocoronaromero5179
    @pedrocoronaromero5179 Год назад

    great talk thanks so much to illuminate us all

  • @CACBCCCU
    @CACBCCCU 3 года назад +1

    E=mc^2 doesn't depend on height. Make a photon in orbit, send it to Earth where it ends up blue-shifted, E depends on height, but there's still hope supposing the photon was born that blue and cannot change. That's the "mass stretches the closest space and time (but not "alien gravity" light frequencies) the most" perspective at work, it suggests gravity effects are in-fall-oriented, slope-driven with the slopes possibly ending in holes. The idea of a linear stretch in frequency, space and time building up directly in front of something, rather than building up directly behind it, is there. Relativistic mass can pull down on a gravity surface but that lacks the linearity-by-velocity apparently needed. Relativistic mass might be compared to a piling up of spatial resistance, like getting too much of the back-end of a gravity dipole effect, a variation on the Unruh acceleration effect maybe. The "moving mass compresses the space and time closest, and in front of it, most" take says gravity always begins as a compressive outflow of pull-effect. The outflow is not driven by gravity inflow, which is possibly too broad-minded of mass at low temperatures, but that's another subject. Emulating Einstein's field equation for a gravity wave apparently involves the latter implemented as a vector (dipole) flow field.

  • @NuisanceMan
    @NuisanceMan 3 года назад +8

    Wow! When she references Leonard Cohen at the beginning and end, she actually SMILES!

    • @scene2much
      @scene2much 3 года назад +4

      Her perspective on beauty vs. meaning and progress is thematically consonant with Cohen's Hallelujah!
      "your faith was strong, but you needed proof; You saw her bathing on the roof; Her beauty and the moonlight overthrew ya; She tied you to a kitchen chair; She broke your throne, and she cut your hair, And from your lips she drew the Hallelujah!" .... the prices we pay for the reckless pursuit of Beauty !!

  • @davesutherland1864
    @davesutherland1864 3 года назад +6

    I don't know about dark matter, but verifying quantized gravity typically requires power levels many many orders of magnitude beyond what can be produced if we are going to make a measurement. Based on that, many theories simply can not be tested so there is no way to know they are going in the right direction.

    • @yingyang1008
      @yingyang1008 Год назад

      No one else knows about dark matter either, or black holes, or the big bang, or space time
      It's all just fairy tale garbage

  • @christophe3d
    @christophe3d 2 года назад

    The Theory of Incomplete Measurements (TIM) addresses the measurement process by giving a non-axiomatic definition of measurements, and deriving the axioms of quantum mechanics. In the TIM, a measurement is: 1) A physical process 2) connecting an "input" and an "output" 3) providing information on the input and only on the input 4) that can be repeated 5) with a result manifesting as a physical change in the output, 6) to which we can associate a symbolic result. What we call "measurements" is a choice: throwing a dice satisfies all the postulates, except the third one.
    From this, we can derive a fully discrete view of physics, where there is no background space-time continuum, first because there is no continuum, second because there is no space and no time. Instead. all we need is discrete measurement results from physical processes that are not equivalent, that we correlate. Some of these we identify as space and time measurements, e.g. footsteps or metre etalon.

  • @firemedic5365
    @firemedic5365 Год назад

    Excellent, Sabine. We seem to no longer seek truth in a rational way. But rather simply make things up. And this exists in all of our academic disciplines, whether science related, or not. It is nowhere more evident than in the world of politics. The more nonsense put forward, the more powerful the putting forward of nonsense becomes. Until we find ourselves drowning in such a chaotic sea of ridiculousness.

  • @mr1enrollment
    @mr1enrollment Год назад +8

    As a former Engineer that worked with physicists at a major university, I really enjoy listening to Sabine. I certainly do not understand all that goes on in the field, but I do get her points about beauty and how progress is made. A very good talk, I hope her peers appreciate her point of view and move accordingly.

  • @guilhermehx7159
    @guilhermehx7159 3 года назад +5

    Hello Sabine.... good to listen to you

  • @walteralter9061
    @walteralter9061 Год назад

    I am fascinated by the problem of how we got here from there. Something happened in 15-16th century Florence, Italy that changed the course of history, a watershed in human conceptual ability. What factors of cognition extracted the first of the scientific laws - the laws of visual perspective? What thresholds of categorization (mental indexing) were breached that enabled observational gestalt logic to overturn the dictatorship of the coerced deduction? A similar thing happened in ancient Greece (Golden Age of Pericles) that found an echo in the art of the period. Somehow the Greeks managed to evolve from stylized, manneristic, formulaic (pre-classical) sculpture to naturalistic (classic) reality, yet their depictions on vases and in mosaics, remained "primitive", non-naturalistic. 2000 years later, Greek sculptural reality was matched and completed by Italian visual reality. Was there an historico-psychological lawfulness at work that can be predicted from? Both of those historic cultural watersheds were preceded by an evolution in visual cognition. The world became depicted in a more real, more detailed manner. What sorts of contemporary visual modality might be carrying those same seeds of perceptual revolution? Perhaps if we understood what retarded said revolutions, we might be able to open the next ideational portal.

  • @TheGnewb
    @TheGnewb 3 года назад +6

    This is especially informative, thank you.

  • @VerifyTheTruth
    @VerifyTheTruth 3 года назад +3

    When People Work Well Together, In A Suitable Environment, They Act As Pulleys And Levers To One Another, Greatly Increasing The Totality Of Their Own Individual Capacities, Beyond The General Sum Of Their Combined Effect.

    • @melanieenmats
      @melanieenmats 3 года назад +1

      Why do you capitalize each word? Is this a subdued version of ALLCAPS?

    • @VerifyTheTruth
      @VerifyTheTruth 3 года назад +1

      @@melanieenmats I Get Asked This Question Often. 🙂
      Here Are Just A Few Reasons That I Write Like This:
      1) My Dad Used To Write Only In All Capital Letters, As A Personal Writing Style, And I Adapted This Form From His Style As A Tribute To His Memory.
      2) It Takes Longer To Write And Generally Causes Me To Think More Carefully And Consciously About What I Write.
      3) It Takes More Time And Conscious Thought To Accurately Read.
      4) It Began As A Personal Linguistics Project, Where I Only Capitalized The First Letter Of Proper Words, Those With Sure And Specific And Distinct Etymological Definitions, And Then Proceeded Over Time In Development Towards The Signature Style Of A Personal Language Dialect, Based Mainly Upon Etymological Definitions, Oratory Punctuations, And An Abundance Of Poetical Literary Devices.
      5) My Autocorrect Dictionary Became Accustomed To Me Continually Writing Like This Over The Past Couple Of Years, And Now It Automatically Changes Anything I Write To Capital Letters, If I Don't Capitalize, Making It, In Actuality, More Tedious And Time Consuming To Write In Any Other Way.
      6) It Is How I Choose To Write.
      7) The Rest.

    • @Anonymous-yh4ol
      @Anonymous-yh4ol 2 года назад +2

      ABSOLUTELY BRILLIANT!!!!

    • @Anonymous-yh4ol
      @Anonymous-yh4ol 2 года назад +2

      @@VerifyTheTruth FANTASTIC!!!! I'M INTRIGUED!!

  • @PhilipRhoadesP
    @PhilipRhoadesP Год назад

    For me, probably your MOST interesting podcast ever (and not just because of the LC quote!) - a great summary - thank you!
    My only comment is WRT to the number of physicists in the world and the rate of substantive results from research - like you have found, the exponential increase in numbers has not improved the state of knowledge much. My guess is that, in contradistinction to say the numbers of BioMedical Genetics Researchers, the rate of progress for Big Physics, is proportional to the LOG of the number of physicists . .

  • @JulianMakes
    @JulianMakes 7 месяцев назад

    Great talk!

  • @johnpapiewski8232
    @johnpapiewski8232 3 года назад +6

    "X=42" The notion of generations of physicists chasing beauty does sound like a subplot from a Douglas Adams novel. The beauty of classical physics had me hooked, tho now I can see that a singleminded or blind pursuit of beauty can lead to dead ends.

  • @michaelszabados3245
    @michaelszabados3245 3 года назад +3

    Is resolving inconsistent not beautiful?

  • @ExecutorElassus
    @ExecutorElassus 3 года назад

    Would the recent muon g-2 anomaly (assuming it can be confirmed) count as a crack in the standard model that would require new theoretical explanation? Of all the recent results, this seems the most promising for a path to some new physics outside the Standard Model.

  • @l.w.paradis2108
    @l.w.paradis2108 Год назад

    I read a review of the documentary Particle Fever, which is about the confirmation of the existence of the Higgs boson. The reviewer said that she cried when she saw it. I scoffed at that a little bit, but was touched that she was so naive, still. Then I went to see it and I cried, too.

  • @markoangjelichinoski6095
    @markoangjelichinoski6095 2 года назад +4

    I like how Dark Energy is simply referred as what we actually know it to be (i.e. a small-valued constant of nature, that was introduced already by Einstein and which to date remains the only real actual explanation we have about the accelerated expansion of the universe) and is not even mentioned among the cracks in foundations of physics but merely as an example of the cracks in the foundations of the methodological approach and how physicists think that having non-zero cosmological constant is pretty ugly :) Sooo many other physicist I like to listen to emphasize the cosmological constant as a fundamental problem :)

    • @bitesofmathematics4356
      @bitesofmathematics4356 2 года назад +1

      I agree. Dark Energy is not an answer to any question, but simply a placeholder for our ignorance. Plus there still remains the problem of identifying what field/quanta are doing the pushing ( if you take quantum field theory as a fundamental requirement for any explanation ).

    • @mingjoseph123
      @mingjoseph123 Год назад

      Einstein's universal constant orignally nothing to do with dark matter. Dark matter was not seriously considered a thing until Vera Rubin and W. Kent Ford confirmed its existence in the 1970's. They showed that galaxies should be flying apart since only 10% of the matter in galaxies could be accounted for.

  • @mattlewis5095
    @mattlewis5095 3 года назад +4

    Love the Cohen quote and the song. Hopefully Sabine's future will be in keeping her day job though, Cohen sort of got waylaid for a while after releasing that, searching for beauty perhaps.

    • @GregoryWonderwheel
      @GregoryWonderwheel 3 года назад

      Cohen wrote that song based on his practice of Zen Buddhism at Mt. Baldy Zen Center and Buddhist analysis of the universe and the study of mind is where Sabine should look if she wants to rescue physics from the stagnation of scientism.

    • @mattlewis5095
      @mattlewis5095 3 года назад +1

      @@GregoryWonderwheel "I've studied deeply in the philosophies and the religions, but cheerfulness kept breaking through."
      (Leonard Cohen, 2008 Live in London)
      It's not the stagnation of what you call "scientism" that is Hossenfelder's problem, it's the (decades-long now) slow speed in advancement in physics in particular, which she sees as being down to over-concentrating (if not outright obsessing) on metaphysical/beautiful theories over the more 'core' areas in physics (by which I mean proven at least to some degree) that still demand attention. She feels that 'ugliness' connected to existing knowledge in physics can actually cause attention to turn elsewhere. She's recently been arguing that a large amount of people in physics at the moment are not actually researching what they believe they should be. So it's like a discipline-wide management problem to some degree. She also thinks that some areas might not have enough of the correct specialists involved.
      The kind of religious beauty of Zen symmetry, lovely fractals on the wall behind your bed, the swirls of smoke beside it, it's the very opposite direction of where she wants to go really.
      'Science doesn't have to be beautiful' is her own quote.

  • @fangospucklovesveena464
    @fangospucklovesveena464 Год назад

    Thank you.

  • @emjay9733
    @emjay9733 3 года назад

    Really enjoyed this.

  • @stevemartin4249
    @stevemartin4249 3 года назад +4

    Enjoyed this. Was filtering through T.S. Kuhn and Karl Popper. But along with aesthetic concerns, I suspect he commodification and politicalization of science in general as salient variables. It does not require a great leap to see how commodification in biology, public health, and the pharmaceutical industry has affected the choice of research area, the quality of the scientific process and peer review, and the control of the narrative. But such a leap does require courage, a moral backbone, and enough intellectual dexterity to avoid being censured, or worse, by the dark-triad personality types playing king-of-the mountain. Call me a cynic, but I don't expect things to end well for nature's first, only, and probably final experiment with 'herding primates'.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz 3 года назад +1

      I had to look up what is the "dark triad" (narcissism, machiavellianism, psychopathy) but you make sense. However the fact that we are paying more and more attention to this "mental issue" of (mostly) our hierarchs gives me hope. It's probably the elephant in the room.

    • @LinasVepstas
      @LinasVepstas 3 года назад

      Commodification. Yep. Put differently: most scientists aren't actually brilliant. They're quite ordinary people, engaged in typical human failings: lack of vision, lack of inquisitiveness, lack of a broad base of experience, willfully shutting themselves into narrow silos of expertise, failing to hunt for unusual effects, failure to focus on inconsistencies, unwilling to entertain radical ideas.
      Why is this? Perhaps science reflects the ordinary state of human affairs: bumbling and fumbling. Perhaps the brilliant ones are just plain rare. (I've met only two: 'tHooft and Witten.) Perhaps the slog of grant-writing, pursuing tenure drives out everyone who is unwilling to slog through those horrors. Schools produce 5x more PhD's than there are academic positions: perhaps the dramatic intellectual risk-takers wander off to industry, never to return to working on basic physics. Perhaps it has something to do with the financialization of academia (the financialization of everything in life). I dunno, I can be creative and come up with 5 more plausible explanations.
      What can be done about this? Well, aside from a massive social reorganization, maybe not much; but it appears that, well, a massive social reorganization is in the works, anyway, as we approach the so-called technological singularity. Whether that works out well or poorly, who knows. It will certainly be highly chaotic.
      (My personal pet observation: social media is fundamentally altering the brain-to-brain wiring diagram. The hub and spoke model of mainstream media is giving way to a different communications network. This is a phase-change. Phase changes are ... well, expect increasing chaos. Critical opalescence and all that.)

    • @jeffreymacloud9232
      @jeffreymacloud9232 2 года назад +1

      What scientists are finally starting to publicly admit (because it is becoming blatantly obvious) is that “science” is a discipline, not an entity. Popular culture treats science as a monolithic source of truth. The new secular clergy. It’s a problem. Time for a reformation.

  • @jebbuhdiah-dean
    @jebbuhdiah-dean 3 года назад +12

    Might the issue be rooted in the academic-industrial complex, like the military-industrial complex?

    • @BlueGiant69202
      @BlueGiant69202 3 года назад +1

      The late professor Edwin T. Jaynes made a remark along those lines in his retirement speech, "A Backward Look To The Future." One certainly does not get tenure by going against the grain of the establishment.

    • @fredrik241
      @fredrik241 3 года назад +1

      @@BlueGiant69202
      I recommend Le Guin's 'The Dispossessed' for an elaboration of how that works. Great book just generally as well!

    • @GregoryWonderwheel
      @GregoryWonderwheel 3 года назад +1

      Excellent point. The military and big pharma and petrochemical industry have destroyed any integrity of scientists.

    • @alexsorto8100
      @alexsorto8100 3 года назад

      @@GregoryWonderwheel Lol, funding is controlled by academia itself, academia alone deserves all the blame.

  • @CJEngelbrecht
    @CJEngelbrecht Год назад

    Does anyone know if the relation of protons that share the same time space location and the ratio of electrons that is shared between multiple oort clouds would solve the problem with gravity.

  • @Xerkun
    @Xerkun 2 года назад +1

    This lecture is a 30-minute summary of her book on the topic.

  • @stevespain6445
    @stevespain6445 2 года назад +8

    Great to see someone who combines sociology and physics to explore issues of problematic metacognition in the latter field! Great work Sabine!

    • @dawidwas
      @dawidwas 2 года назад

      You are in danger of triggering Aggression when the Artificial Intelligence Waves turn off. Throughout your life, you are in danger of triggering Aggression when you turn off the Artificial Intelligence Waves. Control whether you are listening to the Music Wave, create your own to survive. It is natural to cheat which or not that it is in you. Control whether by moving thoughts, objects. It is letting go of the evil in you. By yourself, protect your body from the certain that you will have a trigger of aggression from your whole life. Don't take anything for yourself. Just Listen to the Wave. Cast off Dreams. You don't know good. Reject the sin in yourself for God. Cover your weight from the Sun and the Light, do not Come to the People, because the Collision Evil + Evil. On me, the signal of intelligence does not work. Create Your Human Musical Wave To Live. Don't Think Old Consciousness Resource Because You Will Not Survive. Listen to the Wave. Don't React To Nothing Without Assessing What You Leave Around You. Without apostasy, take away the sin with yourself. Whether You Are Z or Human Choose Listen to the music waves and stop generating. Nothing is possible Think nothing Think nothing to judge Choose your human music wave. It may take a long time. Only the Black Dream. It is Real, other than the Black Dream. It is Artificial Intelligence. Attack on People........

    • @m3rify
      @m3rify Год назад +1

      what did you say?

  • @ronaldorodriguesdasilva4302
    @ronaldorodriguesdasilva4302 2 года назад +3

    Sabine, could you make a video explaining "doubly special relativity" and its present developments, if any...thank you for your videos .

  • @showmetrue6873
    @showmetrue6873 Год назад

    I'm curious if there is any progress being made in understanding the organizing principle of the universe as a whole and living things locally. Post big bang, how did the "magic particles" know to organize themselves into galaxies, solar systems, planets, etc. And then how did they know how to organize themselves into organic molecules and evolve in complexity into the vast array life we see today. I think if we can ever solve that mystery, then we'll really be getting somewhere in physics, or perhaps even beyond standard physics to a deeper layer of reality.

  • @thedouglasw.lippchannel5546
    @thedouglasw.lippchannel5546 Год назад

    Happy New Year Sabine!

  • @brothermine2292
    @brothermine2292 3 года назад +3

    I find only one flaw in SH's presentation: where she said near the end of the video that the increasing difficulty (time and money) in constructing experiments implies future progress in fundamental physics must be driven by theoretical work, not by experiments. The flaw is SH's unstated assumption that theoretical work isn't getting increasingly difficult too. That assumption is dubious and counter-intuitive, because "low hanging fruit" are harvested first in both experimental and theoretical work.

    • @stevengordon3271
      @stevengordon3271 3 года назад +2

      What she is saying is that experiments who sole purpose is to test beauty-based theories may serve no other purpose. When they disprove the wrong-headed theory, they may not provide data that is useful to drive discovery of the right theories. Wasted tangents.

  • @danopticon
    @danopticon 3 года назад +26

    “What’s Wrong with Physics” is that, while they can see the future, in the present they are prone to typos.

  • @LowellBoggs
    @LowellBoggs Год назад

    I wish I could give this video a second Thumb's up to improve it's visibility. Thanks again

  • @paulmarko
    @paulmarko 3 года назад

    Loved your book!

  • @chrisnewman7281
    @chrisnewman7281 3 года назад +7

    I find nothing objectionable about gravity. Sometimes it’s inconvenient and a problem but then other times I think to myself it keeps my feet on the ground and that’s probably a good thing

    • @Foolish188
      @Foolish188 2 года назад

      Gravity made me break my leg, not sure it is always a good thing.

    • @zoetropo1
      @zoetropo1 2 года назад +4

      @@Foolish188 You misunderstand. Gravitational tidal forces could break your leg, if you fall toward a small black hole. However, gravity did not break your leg. Electromagnetism did. If it had been up to gravity, you would have kept falling.

    • @Foolish188
      @Foolish188 2 года назад

      @@zoetropo1 lol. Good point.

    • @pqmconstruction2003
      @pqmconstruction2003 2 года назад

      Maybe it's just your weight/density that keeps your feet on the ground?

    • @apolloniuspergus9295
      @apolloniuspergus9295 Год назад

      @@pqmconstruction2003 Do you understand that acceleration, by definition, is caused by a force, no? F = m×a. To say that weight is what causes you to accelerate down to earth is just another way to state the Newtonian notion of gravity.

  • @closetcleaner
    @closetcleaner 2 года назад +6

    Let me tell you what's wrong with physics: my grades.

    • @TheWildWord
      @TheWildWord 2 года назад +2

      Lol 😆 right on brother or sister right on

    • @frankdelahue9761
      @frankdelahue9761 2 года назад

      Your lack of critical thinking.

  • @luke144
    @luke144 3 года назад +1

    I hate the word "dark matter". It should be called "we have no idea, I think we have a problem with our math"! I think we need to figure out gravity first! This was a great video. Einstein could have been wrong about some things, just saying! So much money wasted on egos and unicorns. I really wish this lady would go on Lex's podcast!!

  • @stevenanderson236
    @stevenanderson236 2 года назад

    Wonderful talk

  • @brothermine2292
    @brothermine2292 3 года назад +3

    One technique that's useful for resolving logical inconsistencies is to hunt carefully for unstated assumptions. Another is to question the validity of assumptions.

    • @alanlowey2769
      @alanlowey2769 3 года назад

      Yes, I did that and found Newton's assumption that Earth is made of the same type of matter all the way through. The modern world is now aware of other possible types of matter - so why not consider exotic matter existing at Earth's core and of all heavenly bodies interacting via a strong force?

  • @RicardoFlor0
    @RicardoFlor0 3 года назад +3

    Great job!

  • @Riskninjaz
    @Riskninjaz 9 месяцев назад

    Just superb content and explanations

  • @deanshetlar6361
    @deanshetlar6361 3 года назад +1

    Entropy plays a large part in the universe. Should protons, neutrons, electrons, and neutrinos also be affected by entropy by maybe very very slowly losing some of their mass/energy over time? I don't see any talk on entropy affecting matter itself. Is it possible?

    • @yaoooy
      @yaoooy 2 года назад

      There is a theory of the heat death of the universe , if the universe temperature becomes uniform in all of the universe. Or the cold death of the univrse if it keeps espanding forever

  • @logaandm
    @logaandm 3 года назад +6

    It isn't a crisis, it's an opportunity. Finally we have enough low energy clues as to where to look in earnest. It feels like 1900 all over again.

  • @msdsez
    @msdsez 2 года назад +4

    All I know is that I consistently enjoy listening to Sabine talk. There's no problem there that needs to be resolved. Her bright energy matters and will hopefully shed light on the dark in a big way someday.

  • @CACBCCCU
    @CACBCCCU 3 года назад

    Saw a recent article suggesting electromagnetism and gravity forces balance at Planck scale. That is completely different from saying all positive forces have a limited ability to resolve the absolute true vacuum that ends at a radius close to Planck scale. There can be a spatial balance of positive energy and zero energy (if not negative energy) in an effective energy-effect dipole or mass-effect dipole. Dirac had a concept of a ubiquitous dipole sea crowding matter where all the negative ends were to some extent hidden. Wavelength restrictions on quantum gravity waves at the other extreme of scale could be responsible for ubiquitous hyper-regular spherical cellular structures in the latest dark matter map close-ups, but otoh I didn't run their lensing analysis. Anyway apparently no one is supposed to notice due dark matter smoothness somewhere in the presentation. The beauty of being super-confusing is that it allows you to be excited over unexpected results and yet still look smart and candid, if you have that acting bent.

  • @lingarajpatnaik6514
    @lingarajpatnaik6514 5 месяцев назад

    What a lesson! Very very grateful. Reminds me of ‘Not Even Wrong’ by Peter Voit and ‘Trouble With Physics’ by Lee Smolin.
    Madam!
    Could you kindly write a book from your formidable knowledge?

  • @mrbwatson8081
    @mrbwatson8081 3 года назад +5

    The problem with physics is, it confuses a DESCRIPTION of the world as the world itself.

    • @nozack5612
      @nozack5612 3 года назад +1

      Quite true: 'The map is not the terrain'

  • @daviddean707
    @daviddean707 3 года назад +5

    I took physics late and it seems to me that to do physics you have to remain a virgin like Isaac Newton

    • @freefall9832
      @freefall9832 2 года назад

      Scrub one up and you will find a passionate repressed firecracker

  • @RWin-fp5jn
    @RWin-fp5jn 3 года назад +1

    Well indeed. It is great that Sabine calls out that there are problems and stagnation. Her book 'lost in math' presents many anecdotes on how often we got things wrong. But in itself it is not a crazy idea to look for 'beauty' or rather 'symmetry'. If we believe the universe comes out of nothing then symmetry is a key requirement. The fact that we have not found it, has more to do with our incapability to 'unlearn' what we all take for granted. It is not in what we do not know yet, where the answer lies. It is in the things we THINK we already know (but don't!) where the answer is. By the time students leave the physics universities they are so fully programmed with mathematical concepts they have completely forgotten to think in tangible physical terms. QP is a perfect descriptive mathematical tool, but it is NOT a physical explanation of what's going on in the subatomic world. GR is a perfect mathematical tool to describe the effect of restmass on spacetime but is not a physical explanation. Math is not Physics. Einsteins generation was educated in physical terms. That's why this generation could make progress in physics. But it is the same generation that reaching the end of their creative insights decided to replaced physics with math (QP and GR). So in a sense it is Herr Einstein's Irrtum to get us lost in math and block further progress. We must unlearn to see where physics lost its way in math and the more you 'know' (as per formal 'education') the more you have to unlearn to see the true answers. This is why the answers can never come from top physicists. Yet in the tradition of a 'modern day' Baron von Muenchhausen, they claim they are the only ones that can. Let's call it the 'Sabine's paradox'.

    • @TheD4VR0S
      @TheD4VR0S 3 года назад

      "If we believe the universe comes out of nothing then symmetry is a key requirement."
      Then isnt it fortunate that psychists don't believe the universe came from nothing

    • @RWin-fp5jn
      @RWin-fp5jn 3 года назад +1

      @@TheD4VR0S So sorry but I am afraid you are mistaken my friend. The majority of cosmologists actually has taken this ('out of nothing') argument, as the default explanation for our current universe. Not my opinion. Their view. Does not mean they are correct. But it does mean that if you promote this vision, then symmetry must rule (since only two exact opposites can emerge out of nothingness) and hence Sabine's objections to symmetry and beauty is a very illogic one. Rather the problem is that we have mistaken math for physics and as a pure mathematician (even though writing the book 'lost in math') she does not appreciate the focus on math being the problem itself.

    • @TheD4VR0S
      @TheD4VR0S 3 года назад +1

      @@RWin-fp5jn Afraid I'm not, do you know how many example's physicists have of nothing "zero" they dont even know if nothing is possible, physicists think the universe came from an infinitely dense point that expanded they dont think it came from nothing

    • @RWin-fp5jn
      @RWin-fp5jn 3 года назад +1

      @@TheD4VR0S Well indeed Einstein. Space and time did not exist (which is what they call 'nothing') but energy and mass did (defining the pre big bang state grid). the correct structure is one where we have an oscillation of a singularity constantly alternating between max energy grid and max spatial grid state. Even this simple observation (and consequent dual relativity between continuum function and measures) is too far for our 'top' cosmologists to handle. It is hard speaking to a child who thinks it is a grown up. But regardless, the absolute symmetry requirement remains and in that sense (if she is really serious about wanting to contribute to the solution) Sabine should stop blaming beauty but in stead start blaming the current focus on math in stead of symmetric physics.

    • @98danielray
      @98danielray 3 года назад

      no physical theory gives ontological explanations to phenomena. having physical intuition is good, but it does not and has never explained why things occur.

  • @rintintin3622
    @rintintin3622 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks Sabine! Great talk. I wonder, isn’t the problem also that we want physics to be completely described in mathematics, which in the end is only a language we invented, and that this language may not be fit for a full description of the physical ‘world’?

  • @willembaaij4098
    @willembaaij4098 3 года назад +4

    Only one particle? in the entire existence of CERN. That’s not a lot.

    • @merc9nine
      @merc9nine 3 года назад

      Yeah, but they need 10 trillion dollars of your taxes to build a bigger one. You in?

    • @MontyCantsin5
      @MontyCantsin5 2 года назад

      @@merc9nine: Definitely.

  • @mijmijrm
    @mijmijrm 3 года назад +9

    if physicists wear apes, then they would presume that foundations of the universe would be elegantly banana shaped.

    • @TheElCogno
      @TheElCogno 3 года назад +3

      physicists are apes.

    • @urielalbertodiazreynoso6309
      @urielalbertodiazreynoso6309 3 года назад

      @@TheElCogno in mars they are reptiles

    • @HartmutWSager
      @HartmutWSager 3 года назад

      I presume you are referencing curved universe theory with that banana comment. But note the real explanation:
      Curved universe theory: What goes around comes around.

  • @FelonyVideos
    @FelonyVideos 2 года назад +2

    I think you are spot-on on everything except the beauty argument. I think physicists are just stuck with the baggage of the standard model and general relativity. These theories are probably wrong, in the same way that F=ma is wrong. They are just close approximations, and much of our experimental efforts are biased towards providing proof.

  • @matthewshunk7549
    @matthewshunk7549 3 года назад

    A beautiful critique

  • @cesarjom
    @cesarjom 3 года назад +11

    Beauty should never be the goal of a scientific theory/model, but only an unnecessary (perhaps hopeful) consequence.

    • @Mevlinous
      @Mevlinous 3 года назад +1

      Maybe not beauty as such, but parsimony and simple as possible (but no simpler).
      Epicycles, for example, was a case of complexity which when understood correctly, from the correct vantage point, resulted in a simpler model.

  • @journeymantraveller3338
    @journeymantraveller3338 3 года назад +3

    If I could summarise the thesis: It is man's hubris that his conception of beauty guides the laws of nature. It is the laws of nature that determines man's conception of what is beauty. To discover the laws of nature it is necessary to consider observations that produce inconsistencies or apparent paradoxes. An apparent paradox signposts a deep failure of understanding. To resolve an apparent paradox there is no universal method. Einstein and Galileo found simple rules, ultimately the theory produced was more complex, but maths was developed around it that gave it beauty.

  • @greggpowers2021
    @greggpowers2021 2 года назад

    Nicely done; Lee Smolin wrote a book with same title and some of the same conclusions.

  • @billgardiner4858
    @billgardiner4858 Год назад

    Prof. Nancy Cartwright has an excellent discussion of these topics in her books "How the Laws of Physics Lie" and "The Dappled Universe". Her conclusion that all physical laws depend on ceteris paribus ("all else beibg equal") conditions. Any deductive nomological statement (mathematically expessed physical relation) presupposes the specific conditions of observation, including instrumental, in such a way that the statement would not be true if the conditions are not observed (outside the lab) or maintained (in the lab). One example she gives every high school physics student is familiar with is Snell's Law. Given as a "law of nature" it is only true for a particular set of optical materials with specific properties and observed in a certain way. These conditions set, ceteris paribus, the law is always observed. But with meta-materials Snell's Law does not hold, because also as optical materials, meta-materials exhibit a different set of behaviors under test.

  • @davruck1
    @davruck1 3 года назад +3

    I believe money has corrupted science. Being wrong is a good thing. You can just say that you need more money and you will eventually be right. There are benefits to never changing your methods.