lesliedellow
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- Sep 20, 2010
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Sorry if I jump in here, but I think physics might be reaching a natural limit. I quote:
"The issue of testability has been lurking for a decade. String theory and multiverse theory have been criticized in popular books1, 2, 3 and articles, including some by one of us (G.E.)4. In March, theorist Paul Steinhardt wrote5 in this journal that the theory of inflationary cosmology is no longer scientific because it is so flexible that it can accommodate any observational result."
I wonder if the problem can be quantified by for example counting the amount scientific papers quote untestable modells and comparing it over time. Is anyone interested in such a project or perhaps knows which organisation could finance such a test?
No physics is not reaching a natural limit. String theory looks as if it might have been a wild goose chase, but people who have spent most or all of their professional careers pursuing that goose may be reluctant to give up the chase.
There are, however, alternatives being explored, such as loop quantum gravity. At the end of the nineteenth century there were physicists voicing the opinion that physics might just about have got things wrapped up. Little did they know what was just around the corner.
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