On the Origin of Time

by Thomas Hertog (Auteur)

Hardcover, 2023

Status

Available

Call number

523.1

Collection

Publication

Torva (2023), 352 pages

Description

"Stephen Hawking's closest collaborator offers the intellectual superstar's final thoughts on the cosmos-a dramatic revision of the theory that made him the heir to Einstein's legacy. Perhaps the biggest question Stephen Hawking tried to answer in his extraordinary life was how the universe could have created conditions so perfectly hospitable to life. Pondering this mystery led Hawking to study the big bang origin of the universe, but his early work ran into a crisis when the math predicted many big bangs producing a multiverse-countless different universes, most far too bizarre to harbor life. Holed up in the theoretical physics department at Cambridge, Stephen Hawking and his friend and collaborator Thomas Hertog worked shoulder to shoulder for twenty years on a new quantum theory of the cosmos. As their journey took them deeper into the big bang, they were startled to find a deeper level of evolution in which the physical laws themselves transform and simplify until particles, forces, and even time itself fades away. Once upon a time, perhaps, there was no time. This led them to a revolutionary idea: the laws of physics are not set in stone but are born and co-evolve as the universe they govern takes shape. On the Origin of Time takes the reader on a quest to understand questions bigger than our universe, peering into the extreme quantum physics of black holes and the big bang and drawing on the latest developments in string theory. As Hawking's final days drew near, the two collaborators developed a final theory proposing their radical new Darwinian perspective on the origins of our universe. Hertog offers a striking new vision that ties together more deeply than ever the nature of the universe's birth with our existence. This new theory profoundly transforms the way we think about our place in the order of the cosmos and may ultimately prove Hawking's biggest legacy"--… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member PhilipJHunt
Wow! What a challenge for me, a reader without the brainpower of Stephen Hawking. Nevertheless, Hertog has tried hard, and almost succeeded, in making Hawking’s ideas on the origin of time (AKA, the beginning of everything) understandable to the lay reader. It’s to Hertog’s credit that I
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remained engaged with his writing even while rather overwhelmed by the ideas.
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LibraryThing member fpagan
The theme of this volume could be thumbnailed as "anthropic multiverse cosmology no, quantum cosmology yes". Whereas the former proceeds "bottom up" or forward-in-time and is independent of observership, the latter proceeds "top down" or backward-in-time and is observership dependent. People whom
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author Hertog greatly admires include earlier Belgian cosmologist Georges Lemaître (1894-1966), "participatory universe" muser John Wheeler (1911-2008), quantum-mechanics reformulator Hugh Everett (1930-1982), and personal mentor/collaborator Stephen Hawking (1942-2018). His development utilizes Everett's no-wavefunction-collapse scheme, regarded not as the usual "many worlds" idea but as a "many possible histories" idea. (Naively perhaps, I wonder whether QBism or Rovelli's relationalism could have served instead.) He also makes use of Hawking's old "no-boundary" concept throughout, eventually combining it with ideas from physics' recent "holographic" revolution to arrive at a notion of time as an emergent phenomenon. Whether its thesis is right or wrong, this book seems to me to be dazzlingly important and likely to be 2023's best.
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LibraryThing member Michael_Lilly
This difficult book is either brilliant or complete hogwash. I am neither smart enough nor educated enough to tell. I plan to read it again. Slower this time, beginning with the last chapter first. You will get the joke if you read the book.

Language

Physical description

352 p.; 9.45 inches

ISBN

1911709089 / 9781911709084
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