WordType Designs
Driven To Distractions©
The Sound of One Hand Clapping©


A rchive Date
[ 18-10-2004 ]
Category
[ Science ]
sub-Categoy
[ Physics ]

      [
      http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000D5351-86D4-111B-82BA83414B7F0000

      QUANTUM MECHANICS
      September 2004 issue

      Feature Article
      Was Einstein Right?
      Unlike nearly all his contemporaries, Albert Einstein thought quantum mechanics would give way to a classical theory. Some researchers nowadays are inclined to agree
      By George Musser
      October 18, 2004

      Einstein has become such an icon that it sounds sacrilegious to suggest he was wrong. Even his notorious "biggest blunder" merely reinforces his aura of infallibility: the supposed mistake turns out to explain astronomical observations quite nicely [see "A Cosmic Conundrum," by Lawrence M. Krauss and Michael S. Turner].

      But if most laypeople are scandalized by claims that Einstein may have been wrong, most theoretical physicists would be much more startled if he had been right.

      Although no one doubts the man's greatness, physicists wonder what happened to him during the quantum revolution of the 1920s and 1930s. Textbooks and biographies depict him as the quantum's deadbeat dad. In 1905 he helped to bring the basic concepts into the world, but as quantum mechanics matured, all he seemed to do was wag his finger. He made little effort to build up the theory and much to tear it down. A reactionary mysticism--embodied in his famous pronouncement, "I shall never believe that God plays dice with the world"--appeared to eclipse his scientific rationality
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