Theories of Everything with Curt Jaimungal - The Genius Exposing Quantum Gravity | Carlo Rovelli

Episode Date: October 15, 2024

Carlo Rovelli is a renowned theoretical physicist and author, best known for his work on loop quantum gravity, a leading candidate for a theory of quantum gravity. Carlo explores the intersection of p...hysics and philosophy, delving into the nature of time, reality, and the fundamental structure of the universe. SPONSOR (THE ECONOMIST): As a listener of TOE you can get a special 20% off discount to The Economist and all it has to offer! Visit https://www.economist.com/toe New Substack! Follow my personal writings here: https://curtjaimungal.substack.com/p/well-technically LINKED MENTIONED: - Carlo Rovelli’s first appearance on TOE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_fUPbBNmBw - Lee Smolin on TOE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uOKOodQXjhc - Neil Turok on TOE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZUp9x44N3uE - Carlo Rovelli’s books: https://amzn.to/3YaBCin - How we know that Einstein's General Relativity can't be quite right | Sabine Hossenfelder: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ov98y_DCvRY - This is why physics is dying | Sabine Hossenfelder: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cBIvSGLkwJY - Carlo Rovelli explains Einstein’s theory of relativity: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/LK_hW_t8IWU - String Theory or Loop Quantum Gravity? David Gross vs Carlo Rovelli: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AUyylR5RPZw TOE'S TOP LINKS: - Support TOE on Patreon: https://patreon.com/curtjaimungal (ad-free audio episodes!) - Listen to TOE on Spotify: http://tinyurl.com/TOESpotify - Become a YouTube Member: https://tinyurl.com/TOEmember - Join TOE's Newsletter 'TOEmail' at https://www.curtjaimungal.org TIMESTAMPS: 00:00 - Intro SPONSORS (please check them out to support TOE): - THE ECONOMIST: As a listener of TOE you can get a special 20% off discount to The Economist and all it has to offer! Visit https://www.economist.com/toe - INDEED: Get your jobs more visibility at https://indeed.com/theories - HELLOFRESH: https://www.HelloFresh.com/freetheoriesofeverything - PLANET WILD: https://planetwild.com/r/theoriesofeverything/join or use my code EVERYTHING9. Other Links: - Twitter: https://twitter.com/TOEwithCurt - Discord Invite: https://discord.com/invite/kBcnfNVwqs - iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/better-left-unsaid-with-curt-jaimungal/id1521758802 - Subreddit r/TheoriesOfEverything: https://reddit.com/r/theoriesofeverything #science #physics #sciencepodcast #theoreticalphysics #podcast #stringtheory Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:01:00 I'm going back to university for zero dollar delivery fee. Up to five percent off orders and five percent uber cash back on rides. Not whatever you think university is for. Get uber one for students. With deals this good, everyone wants to be a student. Join for just $4.99 a month. Savings may vary. Eligibility and member terms apply. What happens if you fall into a black hole? The results are very interesting. The experimental results is a confirmation of something that the majority of loop quantum gravity community expected on theoretical results. We see the black holes. We see the matter falling in. We see the spiraling, the crescent disk as they call it. And we know, because we know generativity, that matter is spiraling and then going into the horizon.
Starting point is 00:01:40 And we know generativity, so it goes into what we call the singularity. What happens next to that matter? Carlo Ravelli, welcome back. It's been two years and I'm extremely happy to be speaking with you again. Thank you very much, Kurt. It's a great pleasure being here with you again. So as you know, there's some recent results, I believe from China, that people present as a death blow to loop quantum gravity. What are those results and do you agree with this assessment?
Starting point is 00:02:14 The results are very interesting. The experimental results, they have not been presented as a death blow to loop quantum gravity by the authors of those results, not at all, and they are not a death blow to loop quantum gravity at all. In fact, the opposite. It's a confirmation of something that the majority of loop quantum gravity community expected on theoretical reasons. But they do disprove some suggestions that were done about 15 years ago of something that if happened would have been great, a way to confirm the theory, which unfortunately
Starting point is 00:02:59 is not there. Okay. So what is that? So the situation is the following. Some time ago there was a suggestion by Lee Smolin and some collaborators of him that perhaps there could be a way of finding a trace of quantum gravity in some signals coming from very far away from the universe, some light pulses, some very short pulses of light that we get from very far away.
Starting point is 00:03:35 And the idea was the following, it was a beautiful idea in fact, I got very excited when it came out. The idea is that quantum gravity in general, quantum theories of gravity tend to predict that there is a minimal length. There is a structure of space at some length. What's important here is that it's a minimal spatial length and not a minimal space-time length or space-time volume. Yes, very good, Kurt. There is a minimal spatial length and not a minimal space-time length or space-time volume. Yes, very good Kurt.
Starting point is 00:04:07 There is a minimal spatial length. So if you measure something, you can measure a certain length, a shorter length, a shorter length, but there's a minimal one, a minimal non-zero one. You can measure zero of course, but you can measure a minimal non-zero one. Now if you take this naively, you can make a consideration which is very tempting. The consideration is the following. This means that space is like grids with a certain spacing, light does not behave like light in vacuum, but behave in a more rich way in the following sense. In vacuum, all the colours of light fly at the same speed, the speed of light. But if there's a grid, the high frequency color are sort of slowed down.
Starting point is 00:05:10 Why? Because they interact with the grid itself. So the equation of at some point light, if it is sufficiently small wavelength, high frequencies of the color it's appropriate, light doesn't move in a uniform space, move in a granular space, and this affects the propagation of light and slows down high frequency more than short frequencies. This is well known. I mean, it's a reason for which light in water goes a different speed that lies in vacuum.
Starting point is 00:05:55 Light interacts with the material in which it is. So when we say that light goes always the same speed, we mean if there's nothing interference, if there's no structure, no granular, no matter, in light goes the speed of light, but in the presence of something, light slows down, so to say. The idea was, okay, so quantum gravity says that at a very, very tiny, small scale, there's some structure, and therefore, we should see this dependence of the speed of light from the color.
Starting point is 00:06:29 That was the idea. It's a very tempting idea, because you can put numbers in. You know the length at which you expect the space to become granular, and therefore, you expect. So this was a quantitative prediction. It's not just qualitative in the way that you're explaining it here. No, it was a quantitative. That's what made it interesting.
Starting point is 00:06:53 Because if you want, it's easy to do a calculation of how a certain grid, a certain grid with a certain spacing, a certain length of the elementary steps, how it can affect light, which frequency would affect. We know the size of the granular structure of space, so to say. People with Liesman in particular had this great idea, say, wonderful, I mean, perhaps this might affect the speed of light.
Starting point is 00:07:26 Now, it is a very, very teeny change of velocity, of course, because the dimensions of the grains are very, very small, but that's a key idea. If you have light traveling for very, very long distances, a teeny difference piles up because some rays go a little bit faster than the others, so they come up separated. And since there are, the universe is nice and gives us some explosive phenomena very, very far away. And we see pulses of light come from this explosive phenomenon, some supernova, some very intense explosion near the corner of the universe, the light that gets to us, if what I've said is correct,
Starting point is 00:08:17 should arrive, some wavelength, some color should arrive before some other color. So we should see a delay in the pulses that arrive to us, some frequency arrive before some other color. So we should see a delay in the pulses that arrive to us. Some frequency arrive before, some frequency arrive later. And in that case what's important is not only the distance, but also that what's being sent as a high energy photon, and then also some mixture, high energy and low energy? What is important is that what we receive is not a photon of a single energy or a group of photons of a single energy, but is a pulse of different energies. Energy means frequency for light.
Starting point is 00:08:52 We have some light of different colors, if you want. Some more red, some more blue. Some high frequency, some short frequency. By resolving them, which is easy, that's what optics do, if this is correct, we should have seen these pulses to arrive expanded in color. So first arrive, say, the red, and then to arrive the blue. Nice phenomenon. Maybe the arrival of distant signals of different colors at slightly different times is what has been
Starting point is 00:09:26 disproven by the recent results. So the recent results, basically they observed some signals coming from far away and they checked that at the level of precision where it was expected this phenomenon to happen, the phenomenon does not happen. So that phenomenon was a hope to see a granularity of space, but it doesn't happen. Now I haven't yet answered your question, Kurt, why this is not a problem for loop quantum gravity. The answer is that at the time, many years ago, when this phenomenon was suggested by Lee Smolin, a lot of people, including myself, got very excited, so said, okay, so Lee has this very excited, so said, okay, so Lee has this intuitive picture of what could happen. Does it happen for real in loop quantum gravity?
Starting point is 00:10:31 And very soon a number of papers appeared, including a paper by mine, that convinced the community that no, that's not going to happen. This phenomenon that Lee suggests, it's not predicted by loop quantum gravity. And the reason is that the kind of discreteness predicted by loop quantum gravity is not at all the idea, it's not at all that space is like a grid. Space is not like a grid. If it was a grid, it would be a classical grid, not a quantum phenomenon. It would contradict a property that it's a property of the theory, which is invariance
Starting point is 00:11:24 of the Lorentz transformation, invariance and the similitude of spatial relativity. Now the theory is invariant under Lorentz transformations, and this phenomenon breaks Lorentz invariance, so it cannot be predicted by the theory. Now this is beautiful because it's really a quantum phenomenon, and that's why people get confused about that. Now, quantum mechanics allows precisely symmetry and discreteness to happen together. It would not be possible classically.
Starting point is 00:12:01 Let me give you an example, or a couple of examples, because I think they explain. One is that in quantum mechanics, we all know when we study quantum mechanics, the original thing, is that if you measure some angular momentum, how things rotate or the angular velocity of something, this is quantized. That's one of the quintessential quantum phenomena. So you only measure certain values, certain discrete values. Now in classical theory,
Starting point is 00:12:37 if the angular momentum was quantized, it meant that along some variables, some directions, things could turn only at certain velocity and not at other velocity. But of course, imagine that you have a body that turns around this axis at a certain velocity. If you look at it rotated, with respect to the new axis, the component of the angular momentum is just a little bit smaller, not much, you reduce it. And therefore, from a rotated frame, you would not see the angular momentum quantized. You could change the value of the angular momentum continuously.
Starting point is 00:13:25 Right. If you're allowed to rotate continuously. If you're allowed to rotate continuously. So that seems to say that it's impossible to have angular momentum quantized and rotational invariance. But that's wrong, because in quantum mechanics we have angular momentum quantized and rotation invariance. How come?
Starting point is 00:13:47 Well, what happened is that when you measure angular momentum in one direction and in another direction, the two operations do not commute. So if you measure one, when you measure the other one, you don't have a precise value. You have a probability distribution of values. You can have a probability to measure the same or one smaller or one larger. So what changes continuously is a probability distribution, while what you actually measure is only those particular values. So one should be very careful because the fact that length is quantized in quantum gravity does not mean that you're breaking any invariance of the theory.
Starting point is 00:14:41 It only means that if you go there and make a measurement, you get a finite result. If you had it measured from a different Lorentz frame, you would have obtained the same result. Another way of thinking about that is the following. Imagine you take a standard model or any quantum field theory. We know that even in the vacuum, if you measure in a small region, it's a quantum effect, you find particles. That's so-called virtual particles. It's a physical fact.
Starting point is 00:15:21 If I go in a small region and check if there are particles, I find them, even the vacuum, because it's only if I measure in large regions that there's a vacuum. Now one could reason, and that would be the mistake, oh, if light travels in the vacuum, okay, if the frequency is high, it would see a small region. So it would see this virtual particles. The virtual particles even without loop quantum gravity. Even without loop quantum gravity and therefore, it would slow down because we know that light slows down if there's matter around.
Starting point is 00:15:59 Therefore, in standard quantum field theory, Therefore, in standard quantum field theory, high-frequency light should go slower. But it doesn't. It's not true. It's not correct. And it couldn't because the theory is Lorentz invariant. In Lorentz invariant theory, light vacuum goes at the speed of light. So the mistake is to take too literally the granularity of space, particularly quantum gravity.
Starting point is 00:16:33 And it's beautiful. Quantum gravity doesn't say that space is granular. Quantum gravity says that if you make a small measurement, you see a minimum length. Okay? This is like quantum field theory. make a small measurement, you see a minimum length. This is like quantum field theory. Quantum field theory doesn't say that the space is full of particle, the vacuum is full of particle. It says that if you make a measurement in the small, you see particle.
Starting point is 00:16:59 It's very different things. Light can travel in a vacuum of quantum field theory without seeing anything, but if you make a measurement, you see particles. So similarly, light travels at the speed of light in a loop quantum gravity background space or quantum background space. But then if you go there and make a measurement, you cannot go smaller than something. So this was realized long ago. There was a lot of discussion at the time, many papers, quantum gravity and Lorentz invariance,
Starting point is 00:17:41 minimal length and Lorentz invariance, it was clarified. And the looped quantum gravity community was disappointed at the time because somehow theoretically the window, the possibility of seeing a quantum gravity phenomena would have been great. I was very excited at that time. That's why I started looking at it. But the theoretical analysis, the theoretical calculation showed, okay, this effect is not going to happen. Time passes, the experimental do the experiment, the observational, the people in astronomy
Starting point is 00:18:22 do this measurement, they confirm the fact on which the loop quantum gravity community had agreed that if the theory is correct, this phenomena should not happen. So everything is fine. It's disappointed. It would have been better if we had a... But everything is fine for the theory. Now, unfortunately, let me put it this way, the experimental were completely clear in the paper. They said if a theory predicts granularity, there's a problem for that theory. But they never obviously said this is a problem for loop quantum gravity. In fact, if you want even string theory, there were papers that suggested a similar phenomenon for string
Starting point is 00:19:05 theory. But nobody, in fact, in the astronomers' paper, they quote various people that had suggested similar phenomena in loop one to one, it is string theory. But never there was a clear result, a string theory predict that. And therefore, the fact that doesn't happen is not a problem for string theory. Similarly, never there was a clear argument that implied that the phenomena come from loop quantum gravity. Now, unfortunately, not from the scientific community, but from external commentators
Starting point is 00:19:39 who like to make everything polemical. The old papers by Lee suggesting that this could happen were resurrected and presented as, ah, you see, there is a prediction of quantum gravity, we're disappointed. But I don't think this is serious. Okay. Going back to the reason why in quantum field theory you should not expect a variable speed of light dependent on frequency. You said that it's only when you measure a small distance that you get these virtual
Starting point is 00:20:13 particles, but isn't it technically if you measure any distance you get virtual particles? They're just of different energies, like infrared? If you measure any distance, you're right, but when you measure large distances, the number of virtual particles goes down, down, down, down. So to see virtual particles, you have to go in the small, otherwise they are there, but they are less and less. The probability of seeing them goes to zero, continuously, but goes to zero. So for a high-energy photon, why isn't it acting like it's measuring at any given point? What constitutes that measurement? That's a very good question.
Starting point is 00:20:59 That's a very good question. That's a very good question. It just isn't. You try, you go into the equation with theory, it isn't. That's a very good question because somehow once we get to the idea of the virtual particle, we use it intuitively, but we should be careful because virtual particles are not real particles. We have this idea, virtual particles just dancing around so the vacuum is a sea of oscillating things.
Starting point is 00:21:34 Yes, just like we talked about science commentators, there's also some science communicators and they show those animations of a jittery space-time and it makes people say, wow, that's so cool, bro. It's so cool, but it shouldn't be taken too literally. That's often the problem with quantum mechanics. It's counterintuitive, so you try to make it intuitive, which expresses some aspect. But the analogy is not good, so it doesn't express other objects.
Starting point is 00:22:06 For instance, the vacuum of quantum field theory, in some sense, is full of virtual particles. But as a state, it doesn't change with time. It's stationary. Nothing moves. So this image of everything moving faster is the sense is completely wrong because it's a stationary state. It's a solution of the Schrodinger equation where nothing changes. In elementary quantum mechanics,
Starting point is 00:22:38 we say that an harmonic oscillator has a ground state, and this ground state has a ground state, and this ground state is a Gaussian mathematically. In the ground state, the oscillator is in the minimal of energy, but with some probability distribution. The state never changes. It's just that. If you let it untouched, it stays that. Now, if you look where the particle is, if you try to pinpoint the particle, which is a vacuum state, you don't find a zero.
Starting point is 00:23:08 There is a probability you find here, you find it there, because that's the spread, the quantum spread of the state. So it's true that if you look, you find it somewhere. Then you look again, you find it somewhere else. Then you look again, you find it somewhere else. Even if you try not to disturb too much, which is hard, you have this spread. But this doesn't mean that there's a jumping particle there. There there's a state which doesn't move.
Starting point is 00:23:35 The source of the confusion is that we're not talking about particles. We are talking about quantum objects, which are not particles. So a quantum space time is not a discrete space time. Right. It's a quantum space time. To say that a quantum space time is a discrete space time is the same misunderstanding as saying that a quantum particle is a particle
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Starting point is 00:25:02 to an ocean and then there's ripples. But technically speaking in quantum field theory, it's not a field in the same way that we think of a temperature field, it's an operator-valued distribution. So they're operators. Is there something else that's going on with the discretization of space in loop quantum gravity that is akin to, well, it's actually operator value discretization
Starting point is 00:25:25 or something like that. Yeah, to say that something is an operator, it's some variable, it's given by an operator, is precisely to say this variable is a quantum variable, right? It's a mathematical translation of the same thing. And to be a quantum variable means that the system doesn't, there is a science in which the system doesn't have a specific value of that variable, but you could talk about a probability distribution of that variable. Well, there's a quantum probability distribution.
Starting point is 00:26:06 It doesn't mean that it can be either here or there. It means when it interacts, you can find it here and there. So that's what we call quantum superposition. When we say a particle is in a quantum superposition, it can be here or there, it means if you look, you find it here or you find it there, but you shouldn't think that it's here and there because the two can interfere. So if you think that it's here or there, you make a mistake about your prediction of the future.
Starting point is 00:26:39 So in a sense, it's here and there at the same time, or more precisely, you can only say that if you look, if you interact with the thing, you find it here and there, but if you want to see what's going to happen later, you have to still consider both possibilities. So that's a quantum superposition. Good. So now if you have a field, like the electric field, the magnetic field or the electromagnetic field, quantum field have to be thought as a superposition of different field configurations. So sort of wave function or cloud in the space of possible fields, in the space of possible
Starting point is 00:27:18 configurations of the field. So the electric field is neither here like that nor like that nor that like that, but there's a little bit of those and the quantum state gives the probability to each one of those. When you go to quantum gravity, gravity, that's what we learned from Einstein, is a geometry of space. There's a very visual possibility that gravity is just space bending. Good. Beautiful. So in quantum gravity, the geometry of space is not determined. It's a superposition of different geometries. So here around us, space is roughly flat. Mikowski space is a flat space.
Starting point is 00:28:08 But if we keep into account quantum gravity, in the small, it's a superposition of all possible fluctuations. And in this quantum superposition, light can still travel at a speed of light. But if you go in the small and bingo you want to say, what is the geometry here? You find a geometry which is neither this nor that. You find a geometry which have limitations in length. So there's no structure smaller than a certain length. Yes. Now, when someone's in high school and they learn about gravity, they learn it's a force, and then some clever undergraduate says actually it's the curvature of space-time,
Starting point is 00:28:49 and then some clever graduate student says actually it can be torsion, and then some PhD may say, well, it could be non-matricity or torsion or any combination of that and curvature. Does loop quantum gravity make a definitive statement as to whether gravity is curvature, torsion, non-metricity or some combination of them? Great question Kurt. Let me answer in steps. First step. You go to high school and they tell you that gravity is a force, okay? Sun and the moon, the sun and the earth pull one another with a force which act at a distance.
Starting point is 00:29:36 We'll be careful. Is that false or is that right? I believe that's right. That's not false. It's just approximate. It's an approximate description of reality. If I say I look there and I see a forest and you come to me and you say, no Carlo, you're wrong. It's not a forest. It's a lot of trees with leaves and so on and so forth.
Starting point is 00:30:06 I say, okay. I mean, you have a better description, but it's still a forest. Okay? So once you learn general relativity, you learn that there's a better description. Why better? Because the other description doesn't capture some phenomena. It's approximate. Okay?
Starting point is 00:30:23 So there's a better description in terms of curvature, but in the common situation which you are, you can still talk about force. It's not wrong to talk about force. Just proper names for something that happened when you don't look too in detail. That's the first point. So could we say that Newton's theory is an approximation and generativity is a true story? I know, of course, because we know there is quantum gravity.
Starting point is 00:30:56 So Newton's theory is some approximation. Einstein, gravity is a much better description of reality. Quantum gravity is going to be a better description of reality. Is that going to be the last, ultimate description of reality? No, come on. Your program is titled Theory of Everything, which is great, but I don't believe we're any close to any theory of everything, which is great. But I don't believe we are any close to any theory of everything.
Starting point is 00:31:28 Plenty of things we don't know. We don't know what is dark matter. We don't know what is... It better be, otherwise I'm out of a job shortly. Exactly. So I believe that your show can go on for a long time before we could ever think about the theory of everything. If we get there, we'll talk about it, but we're not there by very far.
Starting point is 00:31:53 So every theory, it's a way of describing the world at some level of precision. It's not one right, one wrong. Having clarified all that, which I think is important because it's not often said, and because we used to say, it's wrong that space-time is flat. It's not wrong. It's true. It's just not very precise. Around here, space-time is flat, okay? To all degree, I can measure it, it's flat. So I'm saying something very right. And if you say, well, but if you measure it even better, it wouldn't be flat. True.
Starting point is 00:32:31 But to the extent I can measure it, it's flat. So I'm saying something right. There is a force pulling down. If I let my hand fall, my force pulled down. It's true. Can you say it's false? No, it's true. Okay.
Starting point is 00:32:44 So having clarified that, I come back to your question. In general relativity, in the context of general relativity, space-time, gravity is due to curvature. No torsion, no, no metricity, nothing like that. There are attempts to rewrite generativity, if that is possible, or extensions of generativity with some more geometrical, different geometrical, more rich or different geometrical. Nothing as far as I know that I've given a lot of, that has had a lot of success that allows us to understand better. If you go to loop quantum gravity, gravity is not just curvature, Gravity is not just curvature, it's certainly not normatricity, it's quantum curvature. So gravity is a geometry which is curved, so it's curvature, but in addition, it can
Starting point is 00:33:58 be, as I was saying before, in a superposition of different curvatures. So you don't really change the geometrical language that you use it, but you allow it to be quantum, namely you allow reality to be in a quantum superposition of different geometries. So if loop quantum gravity is correct, the best way to think about gravity is that, if quantum mechanics is correct, the best way to think about particles is still a particle, but it can be spread, it can be in a superposition of here and there, and that's the wave function. So if quantum mechanics is correct, you can still think of gravity and geometry, but this geometry is spread.
Starting point is 00:34:48 So you have a quantum superposition of geometry, a wave function of the geometries. Have any people gotten so far as to do interpretations of loop quantum gravity? In the same way there are interpretations of quantum mechanics. So some may say that the wave function is some pilot and then the particle is just riding atop that pilot. Are there any loop quantum gravities that would say, well, the curvature is somehow riding atop some pilot curvature? Yes, there are. In fact, there are exactly papers that do what you just said.
Starting point is 00:35:21 The quantum gravity is still a quantum theory. So all the mysterious aspects of quantum theory are inherited by loop quantum gravity. So if you want to interpret quantum theory, it makes sense to it, which I think is not a bad idea to go into this exercise. There are various ways of interpreting quantum theory. One is the one you just mentioned, the other is many-world, there's this relational quantum mechanics which have worked a lot. And each one of these can be applied to loop quantum gravity.
Starting point is 00:36:04 So if you want, you can be a loop quantum of gravity, manual world guy, a loop point of gravity relation, it seems to me that the relational way comes more naturally. In November next month, I'm going to philosophy department to give a series of lectures in which that will be one of the main topics at Princeton. I'm invited one month in Princeton to give a series of lectures and I'm going to talk about how to interpret, how to make sense of quantum mechanics, keeping in mind that quantum mechanics should include also quantum gravity. So the interpretation of problems which are open in quantum gravity that reflect the interpretation
Starting point is 00:36:54 of problem which are open in quantum mechanics. So can you explain, just give a brief outline of what relational quantum mechanics is, and then also explain what it's like to articulate an interpretation of quantum mechanics. Because many people, as they're showering or driving, as they're going about their day, they're like, I have an interpretation of quantum mechanics. But is there something that's more symbolic or more quantitative, more rigorous, more precise, more stringent than just surmising on your own about the interpretations of quantum mechanics? Individual quantum mechanics is thinking how the universe may work, if quantum mechanics is true,
Starting point is 00:37:35 if the prediction of quantum mechanics is true. The point is that if you take a shower, you come out with an idea and you start telling it around, very soon somebody would tell you, but look, think carefully. If what you say is correct, then this and this and this, and you'll say, ah, yeah, you're right, it doesn't work or force us to some very unexpected consequence. So the discussion about the interpretation of quantum mechanics is a discussion about these consequences and this strangeness. When I make a measurement, okay, I measure the particle and then I split with a Stengel algorithm.
Starting point is 00:38:27 Then I see what is here or there. I've measured the spin of the particle and can be one direction or the other. This is a thing that can be done in a laboratory. Grad students can go in a laboratory of physics and do this measurement. And then something strange happens because quantum theory doesn't really tell you what's going on. It tells you only you have a probability of seeing this, a probability of seeing that. Now the various ways of thinking about that, one way for instance is that, well, there
Starting point is 00:39:03 is much more than what the theory is telling you. The theory is telling you that this wave, this superposition, but as you were saying, in addition, there is also two particles that is riding the wave and going here and there, which we didn't know where it was exactly before. So you add a lot of extra equations to the theory, extra variables, which we don't see, but that's supposed to make sense of what is going on. Some people say, why do you want to add plenty of things which you never use? Other people say, that's different in the physical quantum mechanics,
Starting point is 00:39:37 oh, but it's not really that either one thing happens or the other thing. Both things happen. You see one thing happen because you yourself become two. There's one you that sees up once you that sees down and there's never a moment in which something strange happened that the particle see over there. The particle is still in both places but you also become in both places so there's one you that sees up, one you that sees down. OK, that takes away some problems. But then we have to think, Kurt, that you and I are just
Starting point is 00:40:13 one version of zillions of copies of us that are doing other things. And so whatever you try to do, you have to clash something harder to digest. Is this an empty conversation? No, I don't think so, because I think through this conversation, we're going to get some clarity how to think about quantum mechanics. When Newton did his Newton and Galileo and Huygens and Kepler and everybody else got
Starting point is 00:40:43 to the Newtonian mechanics, it was a long discussion because people were saying, well, wait a moment, can I say something is moving or not? In Newtonian mechanics, you cannot. There's no meaning in saying something is moving or not. You can always say something is moving with respect to another thing or not. Okay? That seemed incredibly strange. It is strange, but we have digested it. We have digested exactly what we have learned. We have learned that there's no meaning in being still versus moving unless it's referred to some object. And so it was a strange message we have understood about the world, now it's clear.
Starting point is 00:41:27 We haven't yet understood what is a strange message about the world that has come with quantum mechanics, I believe. I have my own way of viewing. I'm convinced of my own, but until it becomes common, it's not an answer. People who are proponents of the many worlds will say that what they're doing is following the math. They'll say this phrase, quote unquote, like, we take Schrodinger's equations seriously, but yet yours is an alternative that doesn't do away with Schrodinger.
Starting point is 00:41:59 So are they incorrect in saying that they're just following the math? They're actually following the math plus putting an interpretation on? Or is it true that you can, from the math, infer the interpretation of many worlds? I don't think they're exactly correct. They do mean something. They're not stupid. They have a way of thinking. They're very smart people out there.
Starting point is 00:42:27 But I think it's not exactly correct that they follow the math for the following reason. If you go to school and follow a good class in quantum mechanics, at some point you get a clean math. The math is essentially the Schrodinger equation plus the operators plus the eigenvalue, eigenvector construction that give the probabilities of seeing one thing and the other. So the math has various parts. What they do is trying to do the following, forget this, forget this, just skip this and follow the math and see if you can get the other one. So they make a choice. They make a choice at the beginning of the mathematical book, the so-called postulates
Starting point is 00:43:28 of quantum mechanics. They discard the projection postulate. They discard the measurement postulate. They discard the eigenvalue postulate. They just keep the quantum state and the way it evolves. They say, this is a two-month. I wouldn't say that this is a two-month. But I wouldn't say that this is a two-month. I would say that the relevant month is the rest. Interesting.
Starting point is 00:43:52 Yeah. So what they say is that they take away part of the mathematics of the ways it's commonly presented. of the way it's commonly presented, and they try to recover it just from the first bit. To some extent they do, but with a very long and complicated story and a lot of, you know, this complicated idea that implies that in some sense you and I are just one of many copies. So you have to accept something very strange about reality if you go that way. The idea that this part of the math is not true quantum mechanics. It's a strange idea.
Starting point is 00:44:47 It's not its choice of how to try to make sense about that. Going back to the Chinese experiment, did they outrule even something like Wolfram's model, which is about space-time atoms, or do they just put a bound? Oh, that's a good question. I actually don't know. model which is about space-time atoms or do they just put a bound? Oh that's a good question. I actually don't know. I should, I should. They definitely rule out certain things. I mean, many things. Any naive idea of that, that you know, quantum gravity most people would agree gives a finite length. The question is how this finite length is actually coming in in nature.
Starting point is 00:45:31 They rule out the idea that this finite length is actually a finite grid in space. That's out. It would definitely give this effect and the effect is not there. I would suspect that it could be used to rule out any theory which is non-quantum. So Wolfram, through in a sense, want to derive quantum from something else. And there's a granularity, which is classical. So it might be that gives a problem to that theory, but I'm not sure. Because I've not looked into the, into the details. And you asked, it's just putting a bound on it.
Starting point is 00:46:24 I. Yeah. I can't see why it wouldn't just putting a bound on it. I... Yeah, I can't see why it wouldn't just put a bound. Look, theoretical physics is less clean than the ways usually solved. You can always change parameters and save yourself. Theories are not really ruled out by, it's very rare that theories are ruled out by just an experiment or a group of experiments. Theory usually come with flexibility, theoretshirts can add flexibility. And so, new experiments, you can just patch up your theory. The point is that... Yes.
Starting point is 00:47:14 In the loop quantum gravity case, it's not flexibility that is evading this experiment. Right. That's correct. It's that loop quantum gravity didn't predict what they're saying it predicted to begin with. That's correct. That's correct. It's that loop quantum gravity didn't predict what they're saying it predicted to begin with. That's correct. That's correct. Right.
Starting point is 00:47:28 So, what commonly happened is that some, like, some measurements are hard to fit into a theory, harder and harder, and at some point you say, no, come on. Look, take Newton's theory, right? Where did Newton's theory go wrong? Newton's theory go wrong in Mercury. Mercury essentially doesn't do ellipses. The ellipses turns, the periallium ellipses turn in a way that doesn't fit with Newton's theory.
Starting point is 00:48:02 That's a fact, we know. And in fact, general relativity account for this shift of the perennial equilibrium perfectly. It's marvelous. Well, but when it was measured, did people say, oh, that kills Newton's theory? No. People say, oh yeah, but maybe the sun is not really a sphere. Maybe there's another little planet inside, Vulcan that gives this effect.
Starting point is 00:48:24 Or there's another planet. Yeah, Vulcan that gives this effect. Or there's another planet, yeah. Maybe this, maybe that, they were all open options. So it didn't kill Newton's theory, it was a trouble for Newton's theory. He had to do funny things to fit it. And when generativity came out and gave bingo, exactly the right number in such a beautiful, marvelous, clean way, people say, oh no, that has to be a better explanation.
Starting point is 00:48:52 So why do you think these polemical commentators, as you put it, are so eager to say there's a death blow to loop quantum gravity? I think the polemic between loop quantum gravity string theory sells a lot. People get excited, look this is winning, this is losing. And of course, if you can say something strong like that, it looks raising a polemic and it looks... Science is slow, it's a lot of debates, things are not clear, it takes time. It's not about big emotions. I mean, sometimes there about big emotions. Sometimes there are big emotions. The fact that everybody expected super symmetry was not found was a big shock for the community.
Starting point is 00:49:52 There were articles written by scientists in some Le Monde, the French journal saying, oh, it's a big crisis for physics. But even there, does this rule out string theory? No, of course it doesn't. It's not that because there were no, because string theory doesn't really uniquely predict low energy supersymmetry. As I said, I think commenting about science, it's not, it's rarely commenting about clear-cut things. And in this case, I don't know. I mean, I don't know exactly what has happened, but in that there have been a little bit of acrimony between strings and loops, which is stupid, I think. We just don't know. I mean, we should, each one of us ending the discussion is good to say, look, you're wrong
Starting point is 00:50:51 here, you're wrong here. That's how the discussion. But definitely nobody's dead. No theory's dead. No theory's dead. We all wish things went faster, but science has never been fast. Fundamental science has never been fast. It takes decades. You wish things went faster except the high energy photons.
Starting point is 00:51:21 That's correct. Absolutely. Okay. Then the counter argument that I've read in the comments from some of the commentators That's correct, absolutely. Then the counter argument that I've read in the comments from some of the commentators and some of the comments themselves say, okay, well then that either means that loop quantum gravity was disproven or that it's untestable. But it sounds to me like what you're saying is that it's either disproven or this wasn't a test for it, not that this is untestable.
Starting point is 00:51:44 Absolutely correct. That was not a test for it, not that this is untestable. Absolutely correct. That was not a test for it. Since the very beginning, I mean, there had been a theoretical discussion within the community and the outcome was clear. No, this is not a test of the theory. People are working hard for finding tests of the theory, or at least measurements that could help support the theory or help take away credibility in the theory. So there's a lot of, that's what many people look at gravity doing right now. quote from Sabine Hassenfelder from the video that I sent you. And she said that the smallest possible area, which we talked about, is not compatible with Einstein's theory and you need to modify Einstein's theory to do that.
Starting point is 00:52:32 And if you do, you'll find that the speed of light is not constant. So that was the argument of Smolin back then. And then she said the opposite was vocally represented by Carlo Rovelli who said no no no we can recover the symmetries of Einstein by Averaging over all possible ways to take space apart into areas right and yes, I think you can do that This is her now But in this case you effectively get back areas of zero size Because there will always be some observer for whom area is arbitrarily small, and you go back to the problem with singularities that loop quantum gravity was trying to avoid.
Starting point is 00:53:11 So basically you can't have your cake and eat it too. And I'm curious what your response is to that. Areas of zero size are part of the theory and are not the, there's nothing to do with the singularity. The spectrum of the area operator includes a minimal area, which is sort of roughly the plank area, the square of the plank length, but also zero, of course. And the question is the area of what, right? So if I pick two, let's say, let's speak in terms of length, which is easier. If I pick two points, I can ask what is the length between the two, okay?
Starting point is 00:54:00 If I say is there a greed with some length space, I can ask what is the space of that hypothetical grid. If I make a measurement of a diffusion of particle by something, the diffusion number is measured in terms of area. So that's another. So loop quantum gravity says that when you measure something, you get an eigenvalue which can be zero or can be one blank area or two blank areas or whatever. This is perfectly compatible with the fact that, let me put it this way, from the point to view of a photon, it's a very imaginative language, who's traveling a distance from
Starting point is 00:54:55 a different galaxy to us, it is like the minimal area was zero. True. Okay? True. Okay. It's in a regime of curvature which is very small and that particular sort of measurement so to say done by the proton is like the minimal area was zero. It's not. It's the minimal area of its own evolution so to say. That's nothing to do with the singularity. Singularity is what happens at high curvature, for instance, the central black hole or in
Starting point is 00:55:32 early universe near the Big Bang, where the curvature space-time is very high. What loop quantum gravity says is that there's a maximum curvature because somehow you imagine you have the little sphere, curvature is maximum because the sphere cannot be smaller than a blank area. Therefore, the curvature cannot be smaller than a planck area. So therefore, the curvature cannot be larger than one over the planck area because small sphere means higher curvature. So the way the bound on the size of things come in to help with the singularities, it has nothing to do with what happened near flat space with this light traveling. Carlo, you know that Sabine just had a rebuttal or a retort about this exact issue. And she said, and I quote, If you quantize the angular momentum operator,
Starting point is 00:56:42 the spectrum of the eigenvalues is discrete and that doesn't violate rotational invariance. Carlo claims that it works similarly in loop quantum gravity with Lorentz invariance. But it doesn't. If you calculate the expectation value of the angular momentum operator, it will respect rotational symmetry yes. However, that's because its eigenvalues are both positive and negative, allowing it to average to zero. In contrast, the eigenvalues of the area operator in loop quantum gravity are all positive and have a lower bound. Consequently, the expectation
Starting point is 00:57:17 value for the area in loop quantum gravity is bounded from below and it can't transform under the Lorenz group. This is a mathematical fact. Of course, Carlo knows this. Everyone who works on this stuff knows it. They just repeat this angular momentum story because it sounds superficially plausible if you don't know anything about quantum physics. Now you might say, alright, the area can't transform under Lorentz transformation. Maybe there's some quantum stuff going on,
Starting point is 00:57:45 some weird things happen. Yes, actually Carlo and Simone mentioned that in their paper. That's also why some people in loop quantum gravity suggested there ought to be deviations from Lorentz invariance. I tried to tell them this, but they didn't want to hear that. So what should we hear? Yeah. It's a technical misunderstanding. Sabine has an argument and I think I understand where is the misunderstanding here. She heard many times there is a minimal eigenvalue of the area and is a sort of Planck area squared, the Planck area, the Planck length squared, a Planck area.
Starting point is 00:58:32 This is what is said usually. It's not said correctly, obviously. The minimal eigenvalue is zero. It's a minimal non-zero eigenvalue, which is a Planck area. So in other words, what loop quantum gravity predicts is that there's a zero eigenvalue, and then the next one, it's a finite distance. So you cannot get any eigenvalues smaller than the minimal and non-zero. Sure, there's a gap.
Starting point is 00:59:01 There is a gap. There is a gap. But somehow Sabine misunderstood that for some reason, maybe because in some popularization, articles or books were not said precisely. She thought that there is no zero eigenvalue. And therefore, if there was no zero eigenvalue, she would be correct and sort of complaining. Wait a minute. If there was no zero eigenvalue, she would be correct and sort of complaining, wait a minute, you cannot, Lorentz transformed the mean value of the area arbitrarily small, which is what is needed for Lorentz invariance, if there wasn't a zero eigenvalue. But there is a zero eigenvalue.
Starting point is 00:59:42 I think maybe she never read the actual papers with the quantization of the area. What makes the loop quantum gravity finite, no ultraviolet divergences, is not that any possible area is always bigger than the Planck area. It's that any possible non-zero area, it's bigger than that, is there a gap. So once this is clarified, her argument disappears. And she was very nervous. I think she had a wrong idea in her mind that there was no zero gain value.
Starting point is 01:00:23 She should have perhaps asked the experts before publicly with an argument based on a wrong assumption. So this argument of a non-zero expectation value, does it not still apply if you have zero and then positive values and you average that wouldn't it still be non-zero? No, no. The average can be as small as you want. That's the point. You can continuously make the average as small as you want, including zero.
Starting point is 01:00:53 Zero is a possibility. becomes arbitrarily small if you look from an arbitrarily boosted frame. So that's required by law of invariance. So can we make it arbitrarily small? Of course, we can make it zero. In other words, the quantum state can rotate from maximum probability for finite eigenvalue to increasing probability to zero eigenvalue. That's exactly what happened in the Lorentz transformation of an eigenstate of the area. It transformed in a linear combination of the other.
Starting point is 01:01:41 If you go all the way through to the end, you get just to zero. So you can Lawrence boost it below the plank length squared? Oh yeah, yeah. The difference here is the difference between expectation value and eigenvalue, right? So quantum mechanics says if you make one measurement of one quantity, just one, you can only get an eigenvalue. That's what quantum mechanics is. The expectation value is the average between them. So electron has spin up and spin down, but technically its expectation value is zero then,
Starting point is 01:02:17 but there's no spin zero electron? It depends on the state. I mean, a single atom, if I give you an atom, it can be in a configuration such that you see necessarily with, suppose it's a spin one thing, there are three possibilities. Spin can be up, down or zero. So now suppose you see it with spin up. Okay? All right? So now you rotate your head. Okay?
Starting point is 01:02:49 And classically, the component of the spin in that direction will be zero because, so you continuously rotate the component in zero from one to zero. Now, if you measure various types, you rotate the atom, you don't get something in between. Suppose you rotate by half, or 45 degrees. You make a measurement. Then quantum mechanics says you have a half probability of measuring still one and a half probability of measuring zero. So the average transforms continuously, but what you measure in one shot, it depends on the probabilities and the expectation value. So for consistency, you want expectation values to be able to change continuously when you
Starting point is 01:03:42 make continuous rotation or continuous boost and subformation. That's okay because there are probabilities. There's nothing really mysterious. It's just quantum mechanics 101. It's not some deep, profoundly quantum stuff. I see. Right. So Sabine somehow was confused because she was saying, but you cannot go smaller than the minimal
Starting point is 01:04:06 area if there's nothing else you can go to. Because she forgot that the error operator has also the zero eigenvalue. In fact, the eigenvalues of the error operator are given by the square root of j, j plus 1, where j is a half integer. So it can be 0, one half, one sort of this discrete spectrum times eight h bar g pi. And j can be zero. If j is zero, the area is zero. It's in the formula for the value of the area, which is in all the papers or the books.
Starting point is 01:04:46 Does this whole brouhaha about loop quantum gravity being either testable or the expectations not zero, et cetera, does this frustrate you? No, I mean, it's not testable. My last paper, which was published on the physical review letter a couple of weeks ago by myself, Alejandro Perez and Mario Cristodulo, respectively in Vienna and in Marseille, it's an idea for a possible test of loop quantum gravity. That is published. So it's not because one particular proposal of testing it did not materialize, then therefore the theory is untestable.
Starting point is 01:05:32 No, I mean, this would be silly. If you cannot test a theory in a certain manner, it doesn't mean that the theory is untestable. And in fact, there are many other ideas of how to test it. Unfortunately, as we all know, no theory of quantum gravities for the moment has obtained a positive confirmation, a collaboration. Otherwise, we would claim Nobel prizes and be happy and celebrate. And we hope so. These theories are tentative theories, loop quantum gravity, string theories, the others
Starting point is 01:06:10 are ideas of how the world could be. And that's what science should do. I mean, should try to find possible theories. I think it's remarkable that after many years we have at least some candidacy of quantum gravity. It's not true anymore that, oh, we know nothing about, we don't know how the world could be compatible with generativity of quantum mechanics. The world could be like loop quantum gravity as far as we know. Is it, oh, before believing it, we need a corroboration, we haven't got it. They're working.
Starting point is 01:06:47 This Lawrence transformation stuff was one attempt, 15 years ago, 20 years ago. There have been others with cosmological observations that now with dark matter, measuring Planck scale things. We hope that at some point, some of these possibilities will be confirmed. What's the reaction been like in the community about this recent fuss over the Chinese experiment and then the subsequent popular science articles about it?
Starting point is 01:07:16 Or not articles, but sometimes even videos. About in the community, with respect to the experiment, no, I think it was not even discussed because the large majority of the community, I would almost say the community was already convinced that that effect should not happen. So it was not a surprise. In fact, I don't remember a colleague of mine pointing to this experimental thing. The tension was not at all on those Lorentz violations. The tension was on cosmology, on dark matter, on black say, in the popularization things, look, I got some people writing to
Starting point is 01:08:15 me saying, oh, come on, look what these people are writing. Why don't they actually read the papers instead of commenting on it? I definitely don't want to be negative on anything. It's great that there's popularization. It's great that, but I think there are different styles of doing popularization. There is a style in which you give opportunity to talk, you listen, you make comments, you try to simplify. There's also style in which the popularizers want to put themselves for judges of what
Starting point is 01:08:46 is going on, and that's, I don't think, is very useful. As you know, on Theories of Everything, we delve into some of the most reality-spiraling concepts from theoretical physics and consciousness to AI and emerging technologies. To stay informed, in an ever-evolving landscape, I see The Economist as a wellspring of insightful analysis and in-depth reporting on the exact topics explored here and even more. The Economist's commitment to rigorous journalism means you get a clear picture of the world's most significant developments.
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Starting point is 01:09:53 As a listener of Toe, you get a special 20% off discount. Now you can enjoy The Economist and all it has to offer for less. Head over to their website, www.economist.com slash totoe to get started. Thanks for tuning in and now back to our explorations of the mysteries of the universe. And we super-polarizes want to put themselves for judges of what is going on and that's, I don't think it's very useful. Okay, speaking of black holes, what is the firewall, what is the information paradox
Starting point is 01:10:26 and what does loop quantum gravity say about those two? Okay, so we know that black holes are there, we have pictures of them, and we are all convinced, also mathematicians, or almost all, convinced that there is this strange phenomenon which is Hawking evaporation. Hawking evaporation is a phenomenon for which if you take a black hole and you let it stay there isolated and touch for a long time, it becomes smaller, smaller, smaller, smaller, smaller, smaller, smaller. Uh-huh. I didn't know almost all. We can talk about that after. Who doesn't believe in Hawking radiation. Oh, okay, okay, okay. No, no, that's okay. But the large majority, what I'm saying is that both sides of a disagreement, which I'm going to tell you in a moment, agree that the Hawking evaporation happens. Now, what we don't know and what people have different opinions about
Starting point is 01:11:28 is what happened at the end of the evaporation. There is a part of the community to which I belong, which is mostly made by relativists or loop quantum gravity people or this kind of, that thinks that at the end of the evaporation, you have a deep quantum gravity regime because the black hole is very small at this point. And a small black hole doesn't mean you're close to no quantum. It means you're very quantum because you have a very high curvature that was always saying before, the horizon, the supercurve.
Starting point is 01:12:09 And just around it, the curvature is planckian. So you're a deep quantum gravity regime. So what people expect in my community is that something quantum happens at that point. The other part of the community, which is mostly in the string world, that's another case in which there is a string loop, sort of a stringy world, loopy world, because it's much larger than the people doing actual theories, expect is that when the black hole is very small, poof, disappears. There's nothing.
Starting point is 01:12:43 Nothing at all there. Now, why I consider that implausible? Because if you look at the geometry, when the horizon becomes very small, inside is still very big. There's huge stuff inside. That's gravity, right? In a small sphere, you can fit a big volume because space-time is good. So you can imagine a flat thing with a small throat and then a huge bottle inside or a huge pit inside. So that's black hole. It's very small, but this long thing inside. So what I expect to happen is that there's a quantum transition that allows this internal
Starting point is 01:13:26 part to come out. So all the information inside slowly can come out. So what I expect to happen is that a small black hole, it's remaining, it's becoming a remnant. It's remaining such, remaining small from outside for a very long period and becomes what is called a white hole, which is a hole from which the inside can come out. So the information inside can come out. Now, if you instead believe that the black hole is disappearing, you're led to believe that the information inside is lost or has to come out somehow before.
Starting point is 01:14:14 And a lot of people in the string world got convinced that the information has to come out before, a certain number of arguments. And so I've devised all sorts of hypothetical phenomena that bring information out before. So you have a black hole, things fall inside, information inside, it should come out before the end of evaporation, they think. If you believe that things come out outside, you also believe that when the black hole is small, the information inside cannot be large. So I think that you can have a small black hole with a huge information inside. And people say, no, no, no, because a small thing cannot hold a lot of information, which
Starting point is 01:15:04 is true of flat space, but it's not true of curved space. So they have this strong holographic hypothesis, as they call them, or the central dogma, as Maldacena, Juan Maldacena calls it, correctly so, because the dogma is not something we know about nature, it's something we think they think could be added to nature. That the small black hole doesn't have information anymore, so when it disappears there's no information there, everything has come out before. So they have a puzzle. How does information come out? And that's the so-called information, black hole information puzzle. And there are ways to describe it and to solve it, which basically amounts to not believing quantum field theory, to thinking that quantum field theory goes wrong in some strange mysterious
Starting point is 01:16:01 way. The firewall that you mentioned. Firewall. Yeah, the firewall that you mentioned, it's related to that. So if that happened near the horizon, it's like there is a super high energy, so you get sort of burned if you go there. My part of the community, which includes myself and many people who look on to gravity and many people also for classical tenetivity, do not buy this story and think that information comes in, stays in all the way through the evaporation and then comes out slowly from
Starting point is 01:16:42 remnants and I colleagues are trying to use this idea to see if this remnant can be observed. And my last physical review letter is exactly an attempt to describe a device that could measure in principle this remnant. Now, when I speak to people on this channel, often when they propose some new particle or something akin to a remnant, they'll say, and that could be dark matter. In your case, do you also think it could be dark matter? Yes, of course. Because dark matter is probably the biggest, I would even say almost the only, a concrete, mysterious thing that doesn't
Starting point is 01:17:27 fit with our basic equations. Are the remanents so small that they're like neutrinos and could be going through us millions or trillions of times a second and we wouldn't feel them? Are they akin to that or no? We would definitely feel them if they went through us. No, no, it's a first. We would not feel them. Not because they're small.
Starting point is 01:17:45 Well, they are small. They are super small. But because they only interact gravitationally. So it would not interact electromagnetically. It would not interact with a strong force. It would not interact with a weak force. So they could go through you and the effect through you would be just like the Newtonian attraction of a hair moving next to you, which is absolutely minimal. I thought that they're also exporting something like radiation, but extremely slowly from the information content on the inside.
Starting point is 01:18:16 Yeah, they're also losing the information outside, but that's extremely slowly, extremely low energy, very, very long wavelength. So we looked into that, we have some paper about that. I don't think that would be measurable at present. At least I couldn't come out with any way of measuring that radiation at present. While the passage of these things, so if dark matter is these things, it could, because dark matter, as far as we know, interact only gravitationally, these things interact only gravitationally. So they're good candidates of dark matter. Of course,
Starting point is 01:18:56 you know, they're one of the 10, as you say, they're one of the 20 candidates of dark matter around, but we don't know it's dark matter. So, and I like these candidates because they only, they only, they don't require extra physics in the sense it's not a new particle, it's not a new field, it's a new, it's just, just generativity and quantum mechanics together. Right. Or generativity and quantum mechanics who make a black hole, weight becomes very small, becomes one of these ramines. So you have plenty of these.
Starting point is 01:19:25 So in the history of the universe, and that has to be understood, somehow many of these things were produced. We could have a lot of these things around, they would behave like dark matter. So Neil Turok believes that they're right-handed neutrinos. That's another of the hypotheses about dark mud. It's beautiful, right? We are in this situation. It's much more interesting that thinking that we have the standard modern generativity
Starting point is 01:19:57 and in principle everything derived from there. No, we have something that doesn't seem to derive from there. So we have all sorts of hypotheses. It's an exciting situation in fundamental science. The last time when we spoke over email, I told you about the Yonidalemma in category theory because I saw it as relating to relational quantum mechanics. Because in the Yonidalemma, it says that an object in category theory is fully understood in terms of its relationships, so its morphisms, with all other objects as long as you're in something called a locally small category.
Starting point is 01:20:35 In other words, some people use this to say that an object is completely defined by its relations to other objects. That you can either define the relations to objects or you can define the object itself. It's dual. It's exactly the same. Then that had me thinking, hmm, I wonder if that has implications for relational quantum mechanics. Yeah, the answer is I don't know. I mean, what you characterize as the main idea behind this theorem is exactly the idea
Starting point is 01:21:07 of relation of quantum mechanics, right? So an object is defined by all the relation that has around it. So if you want to think that's an object by itself, there's no meaning, the object by itself. And category theory, it's certainly a natural mathematical language for talking about these things because in a sense, category theory, it's born with this idea that it's a structure, the larger structure that determines what we're talking about. But I am not competent enough to use Kategoi theory.
Starting point is 01:22:00 Maybe I should. And in fact, people have been telling me, why don't you... People get in love with it when they study it. Because obviously there's a great beauty there. But it's complicated to get into that because it's not just a mathematical theory, it's a mind frame, I would say. And I'm not sure the extent in which it could be useful or could just, or is necessary for articulating the idea of the un-dependent relation of quantum mechanics, but also much more trivially
Starting point is 01:22:46 and simply, I'm afraid it would make people stay away from quantum mechanics, articulate it that way. I think there have been some people in France that looked into that, but I don't remember right now. I wish I could be smarter and know more things and add this to the things I'm doing. What else is exciting is consciousness. And many physicists don't talk about consciousness. You think plenty about it. You have relational quantum mechanics, which says something about consciousness, if I'm not mistaken.
Starting point is 01:23:27 But either way, I want to know in your view, what observes the observer? something about consciousness very indirectly. So it's not a theory that leads to consciousness. I don't think that consciousness has anything to do with quantum theory. But indirectly yes because initial quantum mechanics tell us that the best way you think about the world is to describe it in terms of how things affect one another. So you don't describe how things is, you define how a thing affects another object. And that makes, you know, what's the problem of consciousness? The problem of consciousness is that we think there are two things. One is matter, atoms, molecules, stones.
Starting point is 01:24:32 And one is my spirit, my thinking brain. Okay? And if you start from that, it's very hard to think that the two are of the same kind. But I think that both ideas are very naive. There's no my spirit, my soul, my thinking, my observing thing. I am just a piece of nature like anything else. And I follow laws of physics and my brain is very complicated. And the complication of my ideas is the complication of the neurons of my brain. It's just another way of describing things. Matter also is not so naive like a very naive materialism would suggest. Matter is not just little stones or molecules bouncing around because we know quantum mechanics. Quantum mechanics tell
Starting point is 01:25:31 us that it's more complicated. Nature is more complicated. Nature is about how things affect one another. An electron is not a stone. It's something. it's real, but it's only real as far as interacting with something else. So if you think matter in that way, my brain interacting with the rest, it's doing the same thing that the rest of the universe does, is pieces interacting with pieces. Now this does not mean that the universe is mental, because my way of being or your way of being, it depends on the specific of the brain. We are very special pieces of nature, but we are special just because we are complicated and all these things happening. So I think that if we start from a fundamental sort of philosophy where we describe the universe in the way as a collection of things,
Starting point is 01:26:35 each one of that can be described in terms of the others and how things have information about one another, how things interact with one another, how things attract one another. We have a unified way and a unified language in which both the distancing behavior that we call consciousness, nobody knows what they mean by consciousness, it's just how we are and the way stones and planets and plants and the units are described in the same language. And then the separation vanishes, I believe. So I believe that the separation should vanish and will vanish in the same manner in which some decades ago, people thought living beings is completely different than
Starting point is 01:27:27 non-living beings. The biosphere is something totally different. It's not totally different. It's just a special set of processes, but just physical processes, chemical processes. We call biological processes a peculiar kind of chemical process. So I think our thinking is just one of the many things of the universe which is very complicated and we understand it very little. And in your view, because from the surface it sounds like it's suggesting consciousness is fundamental, if the relations are fundamental, somehow consciousness is related to the relations.
Starting point is 01:28:03 It sounds like that. How can it be that there's an experience attached to something that's not conscious? I think relations are fundamental, but what we call consciousness is not at all. The difference is that I need the notion of relation to describe everything, but when I think about consciousness, I mean, I'm describing you. You have memories, you have language, you have anticipation of the future, you have a brain that does a lot of very peculiar things like keep remembering and yes. To say the least. Exactly. And some of this, one by one,
Starting point is 01:28:45 some of these things are comprehensible, right? It's for instance, how you take decisions. Well, you have information and you elaborate, you do things and my computer take decision when it plays chess with me in a similar way. So that part is in common. How you look around, well. The experience part though, the part that it feels like something.
Starting point is 01:29:08 Yeah. The point is that when, when you try to pinpoint what exactly do we mean by, by that thing, which is different, when we try to say it precisely, we can't. We use vague words. And these vague words are just saying that we don't know there is anything special in experience by itself. It's just one of the aspects of the world which is not very different, which is a much more complicated version of that stone which is falling on the other stone and affecting it. Much more complicated.
Starting point is 01:30:08 And this complication, this additional complication is what makes it so rich that we, I don't think there's anything different in me explaining how that stone is affected by another stone and me trying to understand how you, Kurt, are affected by talking with me. It's just, in one case it's easy, in one case it's super complicated. The difference is just the level of complications. And what we call consciousness is just extra complication. So you believe that a stone is feeling something when it's hitting another stone? No, no, because feel is the, I believe that it's a, its behavior is affected by the other
Starting point is 01:30:55 one and what the right language for describing what is going on is a relation between the two. And feeling is related to emotion, to things that you have when you have neurons that fire up and say, oh, I'm feeling something think it's a name we give to something that happens in us, and it's a proper name. It's a good name, but we don't use this name for a stone. It would make no sense. If you had ten graduate students and you could delegate them to the most tractable promising direction for either relational quantum mechanics or loop quantum gravity, what task would you set them on? Doing sitting down and trying seriously to compute the transition amplitude of a black
Starting point is 01:31:56 hole at the end of the evaporation. So the remnant black hole when it finishes being a remnant? Yeah. when it finishes being a remnant? Yeah, yeah. You see, my understanding of loop quantum gravity is that more or less, it's a theory. It's a good theory. It's a consistent, coherent theory. We don't understand it well. It's hard to do calculation.
Starting point is 01:32:17 We're not sure how to define it. I mean, we're fighting about us in loop quantum gravity. This version is a bit better than yours, of course. And there are things which have not been proven yet. So, all sorts of troubles. But it's a theory. It's a consistent theory of quantum gravity. What we don't know is whether it's
Starting point is 01:32:37 correct theory for describing the world or not. So, I would tell the students, look, work on the application, try to apply the theory to concrete phenomena. There are many concrete phenomena, early universe, but the end of the evaporation seems to me, which is the same problem as the singularity is somehow, the singularity is connected to the end of evaporation. And the number of papers who try to do this calculation, but they're very, very primitive, little.
Starting point is 01:33:06 It has not been explored yet. There is a mathematics which is available. It's a beautiful physical problem. It's out there. We see the black holes. What's going to happen to them in the future? Most likely, I mean, unless there's people you hinted to before, right, most likely they are going to evaporate, then what?
Starting point is 01:33:25 So we're asking some concrete problem and if it happened to be connected to dark matter with fabulous because we could then there will be a lot of this remnants that we could check them. So it seems to me that that's a possible opportunity for doing a concrete, for using quantum gravity, not just for talking about abstract possibilities, but for studying something that happens in nature. Have you thought much about how it came to be that loop quantum gravity is the second place in terms of theoretical physics?
Starting point is 01:34:03 What I mean to say is that it's seen from the outside and sometimes from the inside that string theory is the big dog and that its competitor is loop quantum gravity. Whenever people are talking about what is the theory of everything or a theory of quantum gravity, if they say it's string or loop, have you thought much about how did loop get to be
Starting point is 01:34:24 on that stage and not something like asymptotic safety or Rogers twister program or something else? Yeah. How did that come to be? There's plenty of thought about how string theory rose to prominence. Lee Smollin has at least one book about that. And I'm curious about the sociology of player A and player B. Yes. First of all, I think that the scripture gave us, it's true that people think in these terms, in the science community as well. And what they actually are talking about, it's a scientific judgment, but it's also
Starting point is 01:35:03 much more simply a number of people working. I mean, in Totti's safety, there is a few people working in the other attempt that had a possible direction to Quantograve. It is just a small group of, I mean, one group or two groups. Look, Quantograve is a large community. There are, there are dozens of groups in around the world. There are conferences, hundreds of people, uh, some do cosmology, some do black holes, some do mathematical physics, some do the covariant version of quantum gravity, some they do canonical version of quantum gravity and so on and so forth.
Starting point is 01:35:40 So there, there's a, there's a world, uh, around that. So there's a world around that. And string theory, people who say they're doing string theory are more. And they're actually much more variety of things they're doing because people try to say this, some people say they're doing string theory, even if it's vaguely related to string theory, what they're doing, right? There's a lot of development. Right. And this is sort of a little bit self-sustaining because it's good to be part of a larger community
Starting point is 01:36:16 if you can connect to them. So the description you gave does reflect the actual situation. The majority of the people interested in quantum gravity are in these two communities, strings and loops. How come? Historically, there is a clear track to that, which is the history of general relativity as a scientific research field. General relativity, of course, started with Einstein, who wrote the theory of general
Starting point is 01:36:56 relativity more than 100 years ago. It was a very isolated group of people who were doing that for a long time, very few, because there was not much to do. The three had this three little successives, the pre-Ely of Mercury, the deflection of light by the sun, and somehow the redshift. And that's it. Nobody knew how to use it to anything useful. And that was for very long, and then at some point, it started becoming more and more useful.
Starting point is 01:37:32 Application, technology, the GPS, astrophysics, cosmology started moving, and black holes, gravitational waves, so suddenly, generativity became larger and larger and larger. But the people who come from generativity were different people than those who were schooled in the particle physics. So those who did the standard model, who, I mean, Weinberg, all the... And so there were two different communities, and when both communities started to be interested
Starting point is 01:38:10 in the quantum gravity problem, which of course interest both, they took very different, they had different philosophies, different way of thinking, different mathematical tools that were used. And so this gave a big cultural difference. And then something happened in the 80s, which was, this is just sociology, history.
Starting point is 01:38:36 Both theories got great results in the 80s. It was a moment of surprise. But yeah, theoretical results in the eighties. That's the moment in which people got excited. But precisely because it was a great moment of excitement in both parts, few people looked at the other one. Why? Well, because you see,
Starting point is 01:39:02 oh, I'm in a theory that seemed to be working. And then you just focus on it. Why do you want to I'm in a theory that seemed to be working. And then you just focus on it. Why do you want to look at the others? It seemed to be working. You just go ahead. That's for instance, when, you know, when, when, when string theory sort of realized that there is an almost unique string theory, it was great result with the anomaly.
Starting point is 01:39:26 And then look on to gravity, there was solution of the weight equations. Wow, incredible solution of the weight equations. So the two communities ignored one another for a while, and they had so different mathematical mathematical methods, assumptions, that every attempt to communicate, except a few people, I mean there are some people, at least one is one, who try to learn both things. I try to learn string theory, but somehow always as a mature, not as professional string theorist. And it's really, you see, if you're string theorist, you think that energy, it's a major thing, momentum, energy momentum, it's a fundamental thing in terms of thing to think.
Starting point is 01:40:20 If you come from generativity, energy momentum is just not defined in general. It cannot be fundamental because in general, there's no energy momentum of gravity itself, which can be defined in any decent way. There's only energy momentum of matter, but not of gravity itself, except in specific cases. So what you consider your basic conceptual tool for thinking about reality in one camp were not in the other camp. So there was this long separation and a little bit is still there. It's okay.
Starting point is 01:40:55 I think the debate is still going on and we do have hopes of finding something that could help, not much, or almost nothing directly observational so far has come in. Some very disappointing thing has happened. Super scimitivity was very disappointing. If it had happened, I suppose many people would say, ah, those people have a point. I mean, they seem to be... Well, was it disappointing to you? Supersymmetry is not in loop quantum gravity. Oh, no, no, no. I don't know. The non-discovery of supersymmetry was great for us because,
Starting point is 01:41:43 you know, disappointment to your competitors just by that. You looked personally disappointed there. I was not personally disappointed. I was just happy, happy, happy, going around happy and smiling. You see, you were all waiting for supersymmetry. I told you that there was story. So I didn't find this a point.
Starting point is 01:42:05 But then there's also another difference, and that has to do with the name of your shortcut. Sorry. I'll change it to effective field theories. No, no, keep it, keep it, keep it. Of course you should keep it, because it's a great idea, the hope of finding a theory of everything. But loop quantum gravity never considered it its own problem. Loop quantum gravity in a sense, that's the big difference. Loop quantum gravity in a sense is much more ambitious, okay? We are going to understand how to do physics without space, without time.
Starting point is 01:42:50 Really, space is quite... Not like you who have to go observe over the infinity where you know is space and time. We are smarter because we face the big problem directly. I mean, quantum space and quantum time. But on the other hand, Luke-Quantum Gravity is super humble compared to the ambition of string theory. Luke-Quantum Gravity is not a final theory of everything, it's not a unification of all the forces,
Starting point is 01:43:19 it's not something which pretend to be an arrival point for theoretical physics. It's a very humble enterprise, which is, we know the gravitation interaction, what happens when you cannot disregard quantum mechanics in this gravitational interaction. So what happened inside the black holes? That's the only, or what happened at Big Bang? And then, but what is an electron? Why the 16 particle? I don't know. That's for the future. Mm-hmm. I see it two ways when it comes to the humility argument. Because it could be that we just need to take one step forward,
Starting point is 01:44:00 but it could be there's some chasm and you actually need to jump. And anytime you're taking a step, you're just going to fall. You're like, well, look, I'm super humble. You all are just jumping into the void. Yeah, well, you need to jump further. Yeah. No, no, of course we don't know. I was, you see, I grew up in the seventh. I went to school, to university of physics in the seventies.
Starting point is 01:44:20 At the time, the big problem was the strong interactions. The strong interaction was a mystery. Somehow the weak interaction, there was already the attempt to Weimberg's Salam, what we call today the theory of weak interaction, SU2 cross SU1. But the strong interaction were very mysterious. And there was a large number of particles that were found, a zoo of, I was very confused. And the strong interaction was strong. Namely, you expect the perturbation theory to fall.
Starting point is 01:44:57 And what I got from my teachers at the time, the mantra that everybody was saying, my teachers, we're all wrong. They were saying, look, quantum field theory has a problem because of the infinities, the renormalization. Quantum field theory is shit because what is this renormalization business, it's not clear. And the renormalization problem comes because of perturbation theory. And the strong interaction, you cannot do perturbation theory. So obviously, there were people who were saying,
Starting point is 01:45:29 the problem of understanding the strong interaction and the problem of understanding renormalization, getting rid of renormalization, must be the same problem. And therefore, the solution must be forget quantum field theory, find an alternative to quantum field theory, and this alternative to quantum field theory will not have minimization problems and will make sense of the strong interaction. This is ideas, go back to Heisenberg, the S-Matrix,
Starting point is 01:45:54 people were working, Bootstrap, a lot of them. So in other words, with two problems, clearly we should solve the two together. And what happened historically is that that was wrong, we should solve the two together. And what happened historically is that that was wrong because Gross and Wilczek and everybody else, Gellman solved the strong interactions beautifully with the theory which QCD is marvelous, one of the best theory we have,
Starting point is 01:46:16 which still have all the problem with normalization, infinities and is a quantum field theory. And they were a minority at the time. Wilczek and company., and Gross and Gelman, were a minority who were looking for a quantum field theoretical solution for the strong interaction. Most people were looking for a non-quantum field theoretical solution, strong interaction. So, of course, I mean, as Einstein said, same trick doesn't work twice, but I grew up with the idea that you can very well have two problems on the table and think, of course, they're connected.
Starting point is 01:46:59 That's not true. You can solve one and the other tomorrow. So speaking of David Gross, that conversation that you had with him two years ago or so, that's something that every aspiring physicist and every existing physicist should watch. Because it shows string theory is the big boy and it demonstrates that they don't even listen to their competitors. There was a part in the conversation where David was saying, you in loop quantum gravity, though you're the representative at that point, you can't even explain so and so. What was it?
Starting point is 01:47:41 Fermions, putting fermions in loop quantum gravity. And you said, David, that's something that we solved 20 years ago, something like that. Do you see this in the same way that I see it? Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's a, it's a, it's, it's, yes, and it's a double problem. One problem is in communication. So a lot of people theory theory criticize loop onto gravity, but they criticize what loop onto gravity was 20 years ago.
Starting point is 01:48:10 Oh, this problem is open, but that was open 20 years ago. That's not the problem today. There are problems today. But also the second, it's more serious than most. I think we don't need to be experts of each other theories, of course, because one cannot be expert of everything. But it's very useful for science. And science should go ahead by knowing what are at least the claims on both sides. Right.
Starting point is 01:48:47 So. I guess one thing to have great results in your theory is another thing to say you're the only game in town and it's another thing to say you're the only game in town while not looking at what other people are doing. Yeah. That's, I think you put it very clearly. We'll end with what are your hopes? What are you working toward?
Starting point is 01:49:08 Other than this Princeton conference coming up for relational quantum mechanics, what are you working on and what do you hope to solve in the short run? We talked about the black hole, what happened to the black hole at the end of the operation. Right, the remnant, yeah. Before talking to you Kurt this morning, I was on Zoom with a colleague in Marseille,
Starting point is 01:49:32 a brilliant young professor just got a phycological position. We spent three hours this morning getting confused about how to think about this. it's a sort of tunneling process. So we're thinking, trying to understand which sense is a tunneling process, how do you do a tunneling process, not in time but of space-time in some sense. I would love to get some clarity there. And in fact, I wish I could concentrate more on there rather than doing all the various things that I'm doing in present. That's for me the...
Starting point is 01:50:12 What are the various things you're doing? Well, I've written popular books and I'm pressure of that. I get invitation. I do this philosophy thing. I am a bit too dispersive and I want to focus more. You asked what would you like to focus on. I would like to focus on understanding that particular. It's a well-posed physical problem, right? That's the beauty of it.
Starting point is 01:50:40 You have a black hole. They are there. They are out there. In fact, there's another way of putting this problem, but they're like, we see the black holes, we see the matter falling in, right? We see the spiraling, the crescion disc as they call it. And we know because we know generativity, that matter, it's spiraling and then going into the horizon. And we know generativity, so it goes into what we call the singularity. What happens next to that matter?
Starting point is 01:51:08 We have no idea. So it's a very concrete thing. A kid could come in and say, oh, there are all these holes in the sky and things falling in. Where does it go? The answer is we don't know. So, I mean, come on. We are scientists.
Starting point is 01:51:24 We pretend to understand so well the universe, so we should be able to answer this question. The answer is we don't know. So I mean, come on, we are scientists. Pretend to understand so well the universe, we should be able to answer this question. We have quantum mechanics, we have generativity, we have all these ideas, we have the tools. That's what I would like to focus upon. What happens if you fall into a black hole? What happens if you fall into a black hole, like an observer, you want to know what happens to that person? What happened to two, it's the same question for me.
Starting point is 01:51:49 And what happened to the matter that falls into the black hole, which is very much connected to what happened to the black hole at the end of the evaporation. See, the magic of general relativity, the classic of general relativity, that time is very flexible, right? Time can go, you can go from here to here, a very long time, a very short time. Yes.
Starting point is 01:52:13 Two people can separate and meet and for one it's a long time. So if you go into black hole, assuming that you're not squeezed, and if you go through the tunneling and you come out of the white hole, outside that you're not squeezed, and if you go through the tunneling and you come out of the white hole, outside is a huge amount of time, but inside is a very short time. So the information that falls into black hole very fast goes to the singularity or the non-singularity, this tunneling and then very fast come out. But from the outside is a very, very long process in which you see the black hole evaporate and then stays and then things come out, but from the outside it's a very, very long process in which you see the block
Starting point is 01:52:45 all evaporate and then stays and then things come out. So the problem with what happened to the matter inside is the same problem as what happened to the end of the evaporation. And that's the problem we would like to get some better understanding. So in traditional general relativity, when something falls in, if you're an observer on the outside watching something fall in, you don't actually see a cross inside. You see it accumulate at the boundary. And then you're saying, but at some point it does need to evaporate if we're to make it consistent with quantum mechanics.
Starting point is 01:53:15 Then what happens? So speaking of boundary, Neemar Khani Hamad said, any quantum gravity needs to tell us what happens at the boundary of space-time. What's meant by that? Do you agree? Yeah, yeah, yeah. I know what they think. I mean, last time I was in some physics, I talked with Neem about that. I agree to some version of this statement, but not to the version that he means. The way we do
Starting point is 01:53:50 quantum gravity in loop quantum gravity demands to know what happens boundary, but the boundary can be in a finite region. So I can do the following experiment. Suppose we had a super technology. I can take some matter, I squeeze it, I make a black hole, I weight it, I see what comes out. All this happens in my room from some initial time to some final time. So I need to know what was the beginning, what happened on the walls, what at the end, in a finite time. That's true.
Starting point is 01:54:32 I need to know the boundary of the process to see the probability of giving the initial, what, okay. So that's correct. But Nima and with him, the Princeton people, I'm not sure the West Coast people, string theorists agree, they think that the boundary has to be at infinity, that I can only go at infinite distance and look at the boundary there. And that's, I'm not convinced. So they have argument to say that they cannot be in the middle of space-time and make measure quantum gravity measurement there. And those are
Starting point is 01:55:12 argument I don't buy. I think mathematically they get in trouble if they try to see what happened if I make measurement that find a distance, but they are in trouble because they assume a continuous space-time. Which is one of the assumption, one of the, well, there's no continuous space-time. That's the point. They have some infinities that they are struggling with, but these infinities are the infinities that come from forgetting that there is this quantum discreteness in space-time. What's meant by infinity if the universe is infinite?
Starting point is 01:55:57 How do you take the border of infinity? Well that's how they think about it. Do you mean infinitely away from some region? Like you're defining some region, then you mean infinitely away from some region, like you're defining some region, then you say infinitely away from that? Yes, yes. That's the way they think about it, and Nima in particular. So they think there's some process here, but the only way to describe it is that I have
Starting point is 01:56:17 to go at a very large distance, and at very large distance. I see. Because technically speaking, you're at the infinite boundary of something else, if the universe is infinite. You're right. You're right. No. What I think is that the way you've described a quantum gravity phenomena is to be at infinite distance from it, and sort of for a very long time, see what happened. I think this strong requirement for them is easier because at the infinite distance you assume the space-time is flat, right? They put observable what they call a syntotic infinity assuming that their space-time is flat. So they're home.
Starting point is 01:57:03 They have energy. They have energy, they're momentum, they're all the tools of a flat space-time. While if you are yourself in a region, if the boundary is itself in a region where it's curved geometry or strong gravity, you don't have those tools. So no surprise that they have difficulties
Starting point is 01:57:27 with working at finite distance. I think that it's, working at finite distance simplifies the problem. So I want to understand what happened to black hole in a sense by surrounding the black hole small box and see that my problem is just a small box, not the entire universe. Carlo, I appreciate that of the 20 different items you could focus on, that you're dispersed,
Starting point is 01:57:59 and I appreciate that you've spent two hours or so focused on myself in this conversation. That's incredibly flattering and the audience appreciates it as well. Thank you so much. Thank you, Kurt. Again, it was wonderful this conversation. I very much appreciate it. New update! Started a sub stack. Writings on there are currently about language and ill-defined concepts as well as some other mathematical details.
Starting point is 01:58:18 Much more being written there. This is content that isn't anywhere else. It's not on theories of everything. It's not on Patreon. Also, full transcripts will be placed there at some point in the future. Several people ask me, hey Kurt, you've spoken to so many people in the fields of theoretical physics, philosophy, and consciousness. What are your thoughts? While I remain impartial in interviews, this substack is a way to peer into my present deliberations on these topics. Also, thank you to our partner, The Economist.
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