
I like this!
I tend to believe the "everything is right, in one way or another" theory.
I am interested in this subject and, also, I have read a couple articles about different dimensions.
I wish I was smart enough to converse with you all, but I say A+ an this thread.
What is the name of the book on string theory?
The name of the book is called "The cosmic Landscape" , String theory and the illusion of intelligent design. By Leonard Susskind.
The funny thing is for about a 100 years they were looking for a single theory that would explain everything.
But as it turns out if this theory is true, and there's very strong evidence to believe it is, it actually results in there not being a single theory to explain things at all, as there is too much randomness for this to work. (actually it's a derivative of string theory called M-theory) that's in vogue at the moment.
It also turns out that for this theory to work and explain as much as it does, there are 11 dimensions to our universe, rather than 3.
And apparently Stephen Hawkins was wrong about a number of things but he did discover something called Hawkin's radiation, which is essentially energy which is radiated from a black hole.
Tell you one thing, with having only high school physics they discuss a hellva lot of complex issues. I took this book out of the library after watching "the theory of everything" on channel 42.
The sad thing is this is the author claims it's a book for layman. (guess it is in the sense that there's very little math to back up the concepts mentioned)
But when they're dealing with concepts such as Anthropic Principal, Anti-particles, Bosons, Calabi Yau space, compactification, cosmological constants, D-brane, Higgs bosons, quarks, quantum jitters, neutrionos, Z-bosons, and a host of other concepts its quite mind-boggling what they know and if I don't spend a lot of time digesting this stuff, it goes over my head. It might be a book, but it's more like an advanced course in physics & cosmotology.
One of the more interesting concepts of the book is that they believe the universe is essentially part of a much bigger landscape and that there are about 10 to the power of 500 valleys out there and that we are iin fact in such a valley and that this allows for such low probably of facts to occur necessary to sustain life. The shear number of factors that have to be just right, for us to exist in this extremely harsh universe is amazing, so much so that a higher power or supreme being actually made sense until this theory was presented, because most Physicists couldn't fathom how else we could exist.