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A Beautiful Question

Finding Nature's Deep Design

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Does the universe embody beautiful ideas?
Artists as well as scientists throughout human history have pondered this “beautiful question.” With Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek as your guide, embark on a voyage of related discoveries, from Plato and Pythagoras up to the present. Wilczek’s groundbreaking work in quantum physics was inspired by his intuition to look for a deeper order of beauty in nature. In fact, every major advance in his career came from this intuition: to assume that the universe embodies beautiful forms, forms whose hallmarks are symmetry—harmony, balance, proportion—and economy. There are other meanings of “beauty,” but this is the deep logic of the universe—and it is no accident that it is also at the heart of what we find aesthetically pleasing and inspiring.
Wilczek is hardly alone among great scientists in charting his course using beauty as his compass. As he reveals in A Beautiful Question, this has been the heart of scientific pursuit from Pythagoras, the ancient Greek who was the first to argue that “all things are number,” to Galileo, Newton, Maxwell, Einstein, and into the deep waters of twentiethcentury physics. Though the ancients weren’t right about everything, their ardent belief in the music of the spheres has proved true down to the quantum level. Indeed, Wilczek explores just how intertwined our ideas about beauty and art are with our scientific understanding of the cosmos.
Wilczek brings us right to the edge of knowledge today, where the core insights of even the craziest quantum ideas apply principles we all understand. The equations for atoms and light are almost literally the same equations that govern musical instruments and sound; the subatomic particles that are responsible for most of our mass are determined by simple geometric symmetries. The universe itself, suggests Wilczek, seems to want to embody beautiful and elegant forms. Perhaps this force is the pure elegance of numbers, perhaps the work of a higher being, or somewhere between. Either way, we don’t depart from the infinite and infinitesimal after all; we’re profoundly connected to them, and we connect them. When we find that our sense of beauty is realized in the physical world, we are discovering something about the world, but also something about ourselves.
Gorgeously illustrated, A Beautiful Question is a mind-shifting book that braids the age-old quest for beauty and the age-old quest for truth into a thrilling synthesis. It is a dazzling and important work from one of our best thinkers, whose humor and infectious sense of wonder animate every page. Yes: The world is a work of art, and its deepest truths are ones we already feel, as if they were somehow written in our souls.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 4, 2015
      Wilczek (The Lightness of Being), winner of the 2004 Nobel Prize for Physics, longs to find a unified field theory that would include science, art, philosophy, and all the secret corners of nature. In looking for this theory, he asks, “Is the world a work of art?” Or, alternately, “Does the world embody beautiful ideas?” Wilczek aptly dubs his intellectual voyage a “meditation,” as it wanders and leaps among historical figures, times, and concepts. His rhapsodic explanations of the development of science—especially the study of light, music, and subatomic particles—feature examples of visual art that elucidate his themes. However, Wilczek’s ubiquitous parenthetical comments, meant to trace his meandering thoughts, may confuse or irritate the reader. Pronouncements such as “gravitons are the avatars of general covariance” and “the contrast between substance and force particles—fermions and bosons—is very stark” seem self-evident to Wilczek but are liable to remain puzzling to nonphysicist readers, despite the inclusion of a glossary. Wilczek equates beauty with symmetry and conflates art with aesthetics: for him, beauty is quantifiable, not subjective. Wilczek’s enthusiasm is undeniable, but his execution is flawed. Illus.

    • Kirkus

      May 15, 2015
      Nobel Prize winner Wilczek (Physics/MIT; The Lightness of Being: Mass, Ether and the Unification of Forces, 2008, etc.) posits that a powerful Creator made the world because of "an impulse to make something beautiful." The author traces the evolution of theoretical physics beginning with Pythagoras' discovery of the numerical basis of musical harmonics and the numerical relationship among the sides of a right triangle. He finds inspiration in Plato's effort to deduce the structure of the material world from the relationship among the five regular solids. Though it "fails as a scientific theory," writes Wilczek, "Plato's vision succeeds as prophecy and...as a work of intellectual art...[exemplified] by the beauty of mathematical regularity, of perfect symmetry." The author compares the aesthetic satisfaction we experience by gaining a deeper understanding of the symmetries within nature to appreciation of the visual arts-e.g., Renaissance artists' use of perspective to explore the unity underlying different viewpoints. Moving on to the direct antecedents of modern theoretical physics, Wilczek points to James Clerk Maxwell's use of the symmetrical relationship between the electric and magnetic fields to deduce the existence of electromagnetic radiation. Even though this was not what Maxwell had in mind, his formulation was an important theoretical advance in the recognition that "equations, like objects, can have symmetry and that the equations Nature likes to use in Her fundamental laws have enormous amounts of symmetry." With nearly 100 color illustrations and a 90-page glossary, the author attempts to explain to lay readers the fundamentals of modern theoretical physics and the direction of his current research in supersymmetry. "If correct," he writes, "[it] will be a profound new embodiment of beauty in the world." While his attempts to encapsulate developments in theoretical physics are not entirely successful, the thread of his argument is clear: that physical reality is best expressed by Pythagoras' vision that "All Things are Number." A commendable investigation of the nature of reality.

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