Poor philosophy presented as if science.
Mr. Greene may or may not be a competent physicist. However, he is a very poor philosopher. His inability, or refusal, to think clearly undermines the potential of his writing. His writing hastens the death or possible suicide of thought. I will mention only a few example glaring errors of thought I found before having to put the book down due to boredom.
Mr. Green's poor thinking is evident from the beginning. In the first sentence of the first paragraph of the preface of the book, he writes: "If there was any doubt at the turn of the twentieth century, by the turn of the twenty-first, it was a foregone conclusion: when it comes to revealing the true nature of reality, common experience is deceptive." What is a reader supposed to make of such a statement? The reader is presumably a human being. Common experience is experienced by human beings. Human beings exist in a world of touch, smell, sight, sound, etc .. Measured details of the atomic or subatomic structure of reality enter the minds of human beings only by way of instruments human senses can experience. Mr Greene appears to be oblivious to the reality that the individual atoms making up keyboard on which he types are as far away from his direct experiential knowledge as is Alpha Centauri.
In chapters 1, 2, and 3 he painstaking (painfully) elaborates on a theory that since there are an allegedly an infinite number of universes but only an allegedly finite number of atomic particles and energy states, there must be an infinite number of parallel universes. In other words, there are an infinite number of Mr. Greens. An infinite number of Mr. Greens wrote the book exactly as Mr. Green did in our universe. An infinite number of Mr Greens wrote the book using an "a" instead of an "an" on some random page of the book. An infinite number of Mr. Greens wrote the book placing figure 3 before figure 2. An infinite number of Mr Greens wrote the book without the first sentence in the first paragraph of the preface to the book. Etc ...
Mr Green seems to believe he knows definitively that infinite number of universes, combined with a finite number of particles and energy states in each universe, requires duplication of the contents of each universe. He makes no mention, for example, of the alleged orientation of the "orbits" of electrons in each atom in the universe. There is no evidence to suggest that orientation of orbits is quantized, and not infinite. Mr. Green simply asserts the lunacy that nothing more is needed than a finite number of particles and energy states to jump to the conclusion that the contents of the universe is duplicated an infinite number of times.
The book is loaded with useful ideas and explanations. However Mr. Greene seems to be focused on pretending that he can prove that science illustrates that what we know is false or worse, meaningless.
I am reminded of Galileo. Galileo ran afoul of authorities not for his science, but for his philosophy. Today, there is no risk Mr. Green will be imprisoned for his philosophy. I just wish Mr. Green would stick to science. Or better, he should learn some philosophy.
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