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Whole Truth: A Cosmologists Reflections on the Search for Objective Reality [Kietas viršelis]

3.86/5 (51 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 264 pages, aukštis x plotis: 235x156 mm, 1 b/w illus. 2 tables.
  • Išleidimo metai: 02-Aug-2022
  • Leidėjas: Princeton University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0691231354
  • ISBN-13: 9780691231358
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 264 pages, aukštis x plotis: 235x156 mm, 1 b/w illus. 2 tables.
  • Išleidimo metai: 02-Aug-2022
  • Leidėjas: Princeton University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0691231354
  • ISBN-13: 9780691231358
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
"What lies at the heart of physical inquiry? What are the foundational ideas and working assumptions that inform the enterprise of natural science? What principles guide research? How do scientists decide whether they are building theories in the right direction? Is there a right direction? Do physical theories actually approximate an objective reality, or are they simply useful summaries, mnemonics for experimental results? This book is Nobel Prize winner Jim Peebles's contribution to such big, classic debates in the philosophy of science, drawing on a lifetime of experience as a leading physicist and taking the development of physical cosmology as a "worked example." He begins with a consideration of the history of thought about the nature of the physical sciences since Einstein, culminating in a succinct statement of what he sees as the fundamental working assumptions of physics. Then, through a careful examination of the development of the general theory of relativity, Einstein's cosmological principle, the big bang theory, and our current model of the universe, he makes the argument that physical theories ultimately are useful approximations to an objective reality whose nature science is discovering. An essential reflection on and interrogation of the nature and practice of science by a giant in the field, The Whole Truth will be illuminating reading for cosmologists, physicists, and historians, philosophers, and sociologists of science alike"--

From the Nobel Prize–winning physicist, a personal meditation on the quest for objective reality in natural science

A century ago, thoughtful people questioned how reality could agree with physical theories that keep changing, from a mechanical model of the ether to electric and magnetic fields, and from homogeneous matter to electrons and atoms. Today, concepts like dark matter and dark energy further complicate and enrich the search for objective reality. The Whole Truth is a personal reflection on this ongoing quest by one of the world’s most esteemed cosmologists.

What lies at the heart of physical science? What are the foundational ideas that inform and guide the enterprise? Is the concept of objective reality meaningful? If so, do our established physical theories usefully approximate it? P. J. E. Peebles takes on these and other big questions about the nature of science, drawing on a lifetime of experience as a leading physicist and using cosmology as an example. He traces the history of thought about the nature of physical science since Einstein, and succinctly lays out the fundamental working assumptions. Through a careful examination of the general theory of relativity, Einstein’s cosmological principle, and the theory of an expanding universe, Peebles shows the evidence that we are discovering the nature of reality in successive approximations through increasingly rigorous scrutiny.

A landmark work, The Whole Truth is essential reading for anyone interested in the practice of science.

Recenzijos

"[ An] engaging and inviting account of the history of the physical sciences."---Grace O'Hanlon, Library Journal "This treatment is marked by the author's emphasis on the theory's empirical basis, off eringmany examples of multiple researchers independently arriving at the same conclusion. Such emphasis distinguishes this book from more popularbooks on cosmology, and this alone makes it worth having in a university library."---A. Spero, Choice Reviews

Preface xi
Chapter 1 On Science and Reality
1(46)
1.1 Thinking a Century Ago
4(25)
1.2 On Social, Empirical, and Circular Constructions
29(6)
1.3 Philosophies of Science
35(7)
1.4 The Working Assumptions of Physics
42(5)
Chapter 2 The Social Nature of Physics
47(12)
2.1 Multiples
47(3)
2.2 Constructions
50(6)
2.3 The Sociology of Scientific Knowledge
56(3)
Chapter 3 The General Theory of Relativity
59(27)
3.1 The Discovery
59(6)
3.2 The Social Construction
65(2)
3.3 The Early Tests
67(12)
3.3.1 The Orbit of Mercury
67(2)
3.3.2 Gravitational Redshift
69(6)
3.3.3 Gravitational Deflection of Light
75(4)
3.4 The Empirical Establishment
79(5)
3.5 The Lessons
84(2)
Chapter 4 Einstein's Cosmological Principle
86(17)
4.1 Einstein's Homogeneous Static Universe
86(6)
4.2 Evidence of Homogeneity
92(5)
4.3 The Fractal Universe
97(3)
4.4 Lessons
100(3)
Chapter 5 The Hot Big Bang
103(30)
5.1 Gamow's Hot Big Bang Cosmology
104(7)
5.2 The Steady-State Cosmology
111(1)
5.3 Fossils from the Big Bang: Helium
112(7)
5.4 Fossils from the Big Bang: Radiation
119(14)
5.4.1 Unexpected Excitation of Interstellar Cyanogen
119(3)
5.4.2 Dicke's Quest
122(4)
5.4.3 Unexpected Radiation in Bell Microwave Receivers
126(7)
Chapter 6 The ACDM Theory
133(50)
6.1 Initial Conditions
133(2)
6.2 The Curvature of Space Sections
135(2)
6.3 The Cosmological Constant
137(7)
6.4 Inflation and Coincidences
144(5)
6.5 Baryonic and Subluminal Matter
149(5)
6.6 Dark Matter
154(5)
6.7 The CDM Theory
159(3)
6.8 The ACDM Theory
162(2)
6.9 Confusion
164(5)
6.10 Resolution
169(14)
6.10.1 The Redshift-Magnitude Relation
169(2)
6.10.2 Patterns in Distributions of Matter and Radiation
171(4)
6.10.3 Quantitative Tests
175(8)
Chapter 7 Lessons from a Scientific Advance
183(34)
7.1 Discovery of the ACDM Theory Seems Inevitable
184(9)
7.2 Constructions and the Science Wars
193(2)
7.3 Multiples in the Discovery of ACDM
195(4)
7.4 Questions
199(7)
7.5 The Future
206(1)
7.6 On Reality
207(10)
References 217(18)
Index 235
P. J. E. Peebles is a Nobel Prizewinning physicist and the author of several books, including Cosmologys Century: An Inside History of Our Modern Understanding of the Universe, Principles of Physical Cosmology, Quantum Mechanics, and Physical Cosmology (all Princeton). He is the Albert Einstein Professor of Science Emeritus in the Department of Physics at Princeton University.