Physics used to be the most scary subject for me, as I couldn't bring myself to decipher its logics despite my relentless efforts during high school.
At university, I rekindled back with physics as my professor taught it from the philosophical point of view, rather than just shoving theorems and calculations straight away. Thus, I started to read more physics book- and this one was my first try! I stumbled upon this copy at a local library in Bucharest, and I had to borrow it after reading the reviews.
This is not meant to be a review, but rather a compilations of key points and excerpts I extracted from reading this book back in summer '2022 (:
Seven Brief Lessons on Physics - Carlo Rovelli
- the fabric of space, origins of the cosmos, nature of time, phenomenon of black holes, working of our own thought processes
Lesson 1 - The most beautiful theory
🪐 Riemann’s mathematic
- space and gravitational field are the same thing
- Space keeps expanding
- Remnants of universe explosion 💥 (Einteon’s theory)
🪐 General Relativity
“Spacetime tells matter how to move and matter tells spacetime how to curve”
- John Wheeler (American Physicist)
Lesson 2 - Quanta
🪐 Quantum Mechanics
- Max Planck: father of the theory
- Einstein: the parent who nurtured it
- Niels Bohr: pioneered it’s development
- quanta - packet of energy
- Photon for light (proved by Einstein)
- quantum leap- by Niels; in which electrons only take certain amount of energy to excite -> discrete
🪐 Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle
“the uncertainty principle states that we cannot know both the position and speed of a particle, such as a photon or electron, with perfect accuracy; the more we nail down the particle's position, the less we know about its speed and vice” - Caltech
h - Planck’s constant
- it’s not possible to predict where an electron will appear, but rather, by its probability
- ‘quantum mechanics does not describe what happens to physical system, but rather, only hope a physical system affects another physical system’
Lesson 4 - Particles
⚛️ Higg’s bosons
- quanta
⚛️ Standard Models
Lesson 5 - Grain of Space
General relativity and Quantum mechanics can’t both be right!
- Newton: universal gravity by combining Galileo parabolas and ellipses of Kepler
- Maxwell: equation of electromagnetic by combining theories of electricity and magnetism
- Einstein: relativity by resolving an apparent conflict between electromagnetism and mechanics
☄️ Loop quantum gravity
- an endeavour to combine general relativity and quantum mechanics
☄️ Plank’s star
-> the entire matter of sun is condensed into the space of an atom
- Not stable: condensed and rebound again: expansion of universe-> explosion of black hole
Lesson 6 - Probability, time and the heart of black holes
🛰️ Heat
- previously thought of some sort of liquid ‘caloric’ from 1 or 2 liquids (hot and cold)
- Decided by James Maxwell and Ludwig Boltzmann
- the difference between the post and the future exist only when there’s heat
: pendulum swinging forever (momentum shall be initiated by every obtained from stationery point- not from stationary position
🛰️ Boltzmann
- movement of heat from hot too cold is due to sheer chance! - large degree of probability
Thermodynamics- The Science of heat
Statistical mechanics- the science of the probability of different motions
What is a hot gravitational field ? -> what is a vibrating time? -> what exactly is the flow of time?
‘To trust immediate intuitions rather than collective examination that is rational, careful and intelligent is not wisdom: it is the presumption of an old man who refuses to believe the great works outside his village is any different from the one which he has always known’ - p59
- Quantum
- Gravitational
- Thermodynamic
In Closing - Ourselves
Mesocospic - 2014; details mapping of the brain structure of a mammal has been achieved
- scientists and philosophers are discussing about special ideas on how the mathematical form of the structures can correspond to the subjective experience of consciousness.
Giulio Tononi - Integrated Information Theory
- an attempt to characterise quantitatively the structure that a system must have in order to be conscious
- When we are awake (conscious) VS asleep (unconscious)
‘Our appetite for life is voracious, our thirst for life insatiable’ - Lucretius (De rerum natura, III, 1084)
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