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Jed Buchwald: Isaac Newton and the Philosophy of Science | Lex Fridman Podcast #214


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The following is a conversation with Jed Buchwald, a professor of history and a philosopher of
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science at Caltech, interested especially in the development of scientific concepts
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and the instruments used to create and explore new effects and ideas in science.
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To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
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This is the Lex Friedman Podcast, and here is my conversation with Jed Buchwald.
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Does science progress via paradigm shifts and revolutions as philosopher Thomas Kuhn said,
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or does it progress gradually? What do you think?
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Well, I got into this field because I was Tom Kuhn's research assistant 50 years ago, 52 years
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ago. He pulled me into it out of physics instead. So I know his work pretty well. And in the years
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when I was at MIT running an institute, he was then in the philosophy department, used to come
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over all the time to the talks we held and so on. So what would I say about that? He, of course,
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developed his ideas a lot over the years. The thing that he's famous for, the structure of
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scientific revolutions came out in 62. And as you just said, it offered an outline for what he
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called a paradigmatic structure, namely the notion that you have to look at what scientists do as
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forming a community of investigators, and that they're trying to solve various puzzles, as he
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would put it, that crop up, figuring out how this works, how that works and so on. And of course,
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they don't do it out of the blue. They do it within a certain framework. The framework can
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be pretty vague. He called it a paradigm. And his notion was that eventually they run into troubles
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or what he called anomalies. That kind of cracks things. Somebody new comes along with a different
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way of doing it, etc. Do I think things work that way? No, not really. Tom and I used to have
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lengthy discussions about that over the years. I do think there is a common structure that
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formulates both theoretical and experimental practices. And historians nowadays of science
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like to refer to scientific work as what scientists practice. It's almost craftsman like.
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They can usually adapt in various ways. And I can give you all kinds of examples of that.
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I once wrote a book on the origins of wave theory of light. And that is one of the paradigmatic
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examples that Tom used. Only it didn't work that way exactly because he thought that what happened
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was that the wave theory ran into trouble with a certain phenomenon, which it couldn't crack.
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Well, it turned out that in fact, historically that phenomenon was actually not relevant
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later on to the wave theory. And when the wave theory came in, the alternative to it,
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which had prevailed, which was Newton's views light as particles that it seemed couldn't
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explain what the wave theory could explain. Again, not true. Not true. Much more complex
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than that. The wave theory offered the opportunity to deploy novel experimental and mathematical
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structures, which gave younger scientists, mathematicians and others, the opportunity
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to effect, manufacture, make new sorts of devices. It's not that the alternative couldn't sort of
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explain these things, but it never was able to generate them de novo as novelties. In other
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words, if you think of it as something scientists want to progress in the sense of finding new stuff
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to solve, then I think what often happens is that it's not so much that the prevailing view
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can't crack something as that it doesn't give you the opportunity to do new stuff.
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When you say new stuff, are we referring to experimental science here or
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new stuff in the space of new theories?
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Could be both. Could be both actually.
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So how does that... Can you maybe elaborate a little bit on the story of the wave view?
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Sure. The prevailing view of light, at least in France where the wave theory really first took
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off, although it had been introduced in England by Thomas Young, the prevailing theory dates back
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to Newton that light is a stream of particles and that refraction and reflection involve sort
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of repulsive and attractive forces that deflect and bend the paths of these particles. Newton was
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not able successfully to deal with the phenomenon of what happens when light goes past a knife's
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edge or a sharp edge, what we now call diffraction. He had cooked up something about it that no
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mathematical structure could be applied. Thomas Young first, but really this guy named Augustin
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Fresnel in France deployed, in Fresnel's case, rather advanced calculus forms of mathematics,
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which enabled computations to be done and observations to be melded with these
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computations in a way that you could not do or see how to do with Newton. Did that mean that the
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Newtonian explanation of what goes on in diffraction fails? Not really. You can actually
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make it work, but you can't generate anything new out of it. Whereas using the mathematics
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of wave optics in respect to a particular phenomenon called polarization, which ironically
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was discovered by partisans of Newton's way of doing things, you were able to generate devices
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which reflect light in crystals, do various things that the Newtonian way could accommodate only
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after the fact. They couldn't generate it from the beginning. And so if you want to be somebody who
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is working a novel vein, which increasingly becomes the case with people who become what we
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now call physicists in the 1820s, 30s, and 40s in particular, then that's the direction you're going
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to go. But there were holdouts until the 1850s. I want to try to elaborate on the nature of the
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disagreement you have with Thomas Kuhn. So do you still believe in paradigm shifts? Do you still see
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that there's ideas that really have a transformational effect on science? The nature of
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the disagreement has to do with how those paradigm shifts come to be? How they come to be and how
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they change. I certainly think they exist. How strong they may be at any given time is maybe not
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quite as powerful as Tom thought in general. Although towards the end of his life, he was
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beginning to develop different modifications of his original way of thinking. But I don't think
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that the changes happened quite so neatly, if you will, in reaction to novel experimental
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observations. They get much more complex than that. In terms of neatness, how much of science
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progresses by individual lone geniuses and how much by the messy collaboration of competing and
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cooperating humans? I don't think you can cut that with a knife to say it's this percent and
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that percent. It's almost always the case that there are one or two or maybe three individuals
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who are sort of central to what goes on when things begin to shift. Are they inevitably and
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solely responsible for what then begins to happen in a major way? I think not. It depends. You can
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go very far back with this, even into antiquity to see what goes on. The major locus we always
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talk about from the beginning is if you're talking about Galileo's work on motion, for example,
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were there ways of accommodating it that others could adapt to without buying into the whole
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scheme? Yes. Did it eventually evolve and start convincing people because you could also do
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other things with it that you couldn't otherwise do? Also, yes. Let me give you an example.
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The great French mathematician philosopher Descartes, who was a mechanical philosopher,
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he believed the world was matter in motion. He never thought much of what Galileo had done
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in respect to motion because he thought, well, at best, it's some sort of approximative scheme
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or something like that. But one of his initial, I wouldn't call him a disciple, but follower,
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who then broke with him in a number of ways, was a man named Christian Huygens, who was,
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along with Newton, one of the two greatest scientists of the 17th century. Huygens is
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older than Newton, and Huygens nicely deployed Galilean relationships in respect to motion
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to develop all sorts of things, including the first pendulum governed clock,
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and even figured out how to build one, which keeps perfect time, except it didn't work. But
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he had the mathematical structure for it. How well known is Huygens?
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Oh, very well known. Should I know him well?
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Yes, you should. Interesting.
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You should definitely know him.
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No, no, no, no, no. Can we define should here?
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Okay.
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Because I don't.
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Right.
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So is this should like, yeah, can you define should?
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Should means this. If you had taken up to a second year physics courses, you should,
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you would have heard his name because one of the fundamental principles in optics is called
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Huygens principle.
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Okay.
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Okay.
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Yeah, so I have and I have heard his name.
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There you go.
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No, but I don't remember.
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But you don't remember.
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So I mean, there's a very different thing between names attached to principles and laws and so on
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that you sometimes let go of, you just remember the equations of the principles themselves,
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and the personalities of science. And there's certain personalities,
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certain human beings that stand out. And that's why there's a sense to which the lone inventor,
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the lone scientist is the way I personally mean, I think a lot of people think about the history
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of science is these lone geniuses. Without them, the senses, if you remove Newton from the picture,
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if you remove Galileo from the picture, then science would, there's almost a feeling like
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it would just have stopped there. Or at the very least, there's a feeling like it would take much
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longer to develop the things that were developed. Is that a silly way to look at the history?
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That's not entirely incorrect, I suppose. I find it difficult to believe that had Galileo not
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existed, that eventually someone like Huygens, for instance, given the context of the time,
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what was floating around in the belief structure concerning the nature of the world and so on,
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the developments in mathematics and whatnot, that sooner or later, whether it would have been
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exactly the same or not, I cannot say. But would things have evolved? Yes.
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If we look at the long arc of history of science, from back when we were in the caves trying to knock
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two rocks together, or maybe make a basic tool to a long time from now, many centuries from now,
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when human civilization finally destroys itself. If we look at that history, and imagine you're
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a historian at the end, like with the fire of the apocalypse coming upon us, and you look back at
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this time in the 21st century, how far along are we on that arc? Do you sense? Have we invented
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and discovered everything that's to be discovered, or are we at like below 1%? You're going to get a
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lot of absurd questions today. I apologize. It's a lugubrious picture you're painting there.
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I don't even know what the word lugubrious means, but I love it. Lugubrious.
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Well, let me try and separate the question of whether we're all going to die in an apocalypse
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in several hundred years or not from the question of where science may be sitting.
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Take that as an assumption. Okay. I find that hard to say. And I find it hard to say
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because in the deepest sense of the term, as it's usually deployed by philosophers of science today,
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I'm not fundamentally a realist. That is to say, I think our access to the inner workings of nature
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is inevitably mediated by what we can do with the materials and factors around us. We can probe
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things in various ways. Does that mean that I don't think that the standard model in quantum
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electrodynamics is incorrect? Of course not. I wouldn't even dream of saying such a thing.
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It can do a lot, especially when it comes to figuring out what's happening in very large,
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expensive particle accelerators and applying results in cosmology and so on as well.
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Do I think that we have inevitably probed the depths of reality through this? I do not agree
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with Steven Weinberg who thinks we have about such things. Do I, on the other hand, think that
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the way in which science has been moving for the last hundred years, physics in particular is what
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I have in mind, will continue on the same course? In that sense, I don't because we're not going to
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be building bigger and bigger and more and more expensive machines to rip apart particles in
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various ways. In which case, what are physicists going to do? They'll turn their attention to other
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aspects. There are all sorts of things we've never explained about the material world.
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We don't have theories that go beyond a certain point for all sorts of things.
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Can we, for example, start with the standard model and work our way up all the way to chemical
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transformations? You can make an argument about it and you can justify things, but in chemistry,
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that's not the way people work. They work with much higher level quantum mechanical relationships
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and so on. This notion of the deep theory to explain everything is a longstanding belief
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which goes back pretty far, although I think it only takes its fullest form
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sometime towards the end of the 19th century. Maybe we just speak to that. You're referring to
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a hope, a dream, a reality of coming up with a theory of everything that explains everything.
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There's a very specific thing that that currently means in physics,
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is the unification of the laws of physics. But I'm sure in antiquity or before it meant maybe
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something else, or is it always about physics? Because I mean, I think as you've kind of implied
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in physics, there's a sense once you get to the theory of everything, you've understood everything,
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but there's a very deep sense in which you've actually understood not very much at all.
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You've understood at that particular level how things work, but you don't understand how the
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abstractions on top of abstractions form, all the way to the chemistry, to the human mind,
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and the human societies, and all those kinds of things. So maybe you can speak to the theory of
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everything and its history and comment on what the heck does that even mean, the theory of everything.
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Well, I don't think you can go back that far with something like that. Maybe to the, at best,
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to the 17th century. If you go back all the way in antiquity, there are, of course,
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discussions about the nature of the world. But first of all, you have to recognize that the
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manipulative character of physics and chemistry, the probing of... Let me put it this way. We assume
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and have assumed for a long time, I'll come back to when in a moment, that if I take a little device,
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which is really complicatedly made out of all kinds of things, and I put a piece of some material in
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it, and I monkey around with it and do all kinds of unnatural things to it, things that wouldn't
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happen naturally, and I find out how it behaves and whatnot, and then I try and make an argument
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about how that really applies even in the natural world without any artificial structures and so on.
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That's not a belief that was widely held by pretty much anyone until sometime maybe
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in the 1500s. And when it was first held, it was held by people we now call alchemists.
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So alchemy was the first, the early days of the theory of everything, of a dream of a theory of
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everything. I would put it a little differently. I think it's more along the way, a dream that
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by probing nature in artificially constructed ways, we can find out what's going on deep down there.
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So that's distinct from science being an observing thing, where you observe nature
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and you study nature. You're talking about probing, like messing with nature to understand it.
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Indeed I am. But that, of course, is the very essence of experimental science. You have to
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manipulate nature to find out things about it, and then you have to convince others that you haven't
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so manipulated it that what you've done is to produce what amounts to fake artifactual behavior
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that doesn't really hold purely naturally. So where are we today in your sense to jump
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around a little bit with the theory of everything? Maybe a quick kind of sense you have about the
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journey in the world of physics that we're taking towards the theory of everything.
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Well, I'm, of course, not a practicing physicist. I mean, I was trained in physics at Princeton
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a long time ago. Until Thomas Kuhn stole you away.
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More or less. I was taking graduate courses in those days in general relativity. I was an
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undergraduate, but I moved up and then I took a course with him and...
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Well, you made the mistake of being compelled by charismatic philosophers and never looked back.
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I suppose so in a way. From what I understand, talking especially to my friends at Caltech,
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like Kip Thorne and others, the fundamental notion is that actually the laws that even
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at the deepest level we can sort of divine and work with in the universe that we inhabit are
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perhaps quite unique to this particular universe as it formed at the Big Bang.
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The question is, how deep does it go? If you are very mathematically inclined, the prevailing notion
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for several decades now has been what's called string theory, but that has not been able to
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figure a way to generate probative experimental evidence, although it's pretty good apparently
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at accommodating things. Then the question is, what's before the Big Bang? Actually,
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the word before doesn't mean anything given the nature of time, but why do we have the
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laws that prevail in our universe? Well, there is a notion that those laws prevail in our universe
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because if they didn't, we wouldn't be here.
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That's a bit of a cyclical, but nevertheless, a compelling definition. And there's all kinds
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of things like it seems like the unification of those laws could be discovered by looking
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inside of a black hole because you get both the general relativity and the quantum mechanics,
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quantum field theory in there. Experimentally, of course, there's a lot of interesting ideas.
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We can't really look close to the Big Bang. We can't look that far back. Caltech and MIT will
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LIGO looking at gravitational waves, perhaps allows us to march backwards and so on. Yeah,
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it's really exciting space. And there's, of course, the theory of everything,
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like with a lot of things in science, captivates the dreams of those who are perhaps completely
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outside of science. It's the dream of discovering the key to the nature of how everything works.
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And that feels deeply human. That's perhaps the basic elements of what makes up a scientist in
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the end is that curiosity, that longing to understand. Let me ask, you mentioned a disagreement
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with Weinberg on reality. Could you elaborate a little bit? Well, obviously, I don't disagree
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with Steve Weinberg on physics itself. I wouldn't know enough to even begin to do that. And clearly,
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you know, he's one of the founders of the standard model and so on. And it works to a level of
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accuracy that no physical theory has ever worked at before. I suppose the question in my mind is
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something that in one way could go back to the philosopher Immanuel Kant in the 18th century,
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namely, can we really ever convince ourselves that we have come to grips with something that is
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not in itself knowable to us by our senses, or even except in the most remote way through the
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complex instruments that we make as to what it is that underlies everything? Can we corral it
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with mathematics and experimental structures? Yes. Do I think that a particular way of corraling
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nature will inevitably play itself out? I don't know. It always has. I'll put it to you that way.
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So the basic question is, can we know reality? Is that the Kant question? Is that the Weinberg
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question? We humans, with our brains, can we comprehend reality? Sounds like a very trippy
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question because a lot of it rests on definitions of know and comprehend and reality. But
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get to the bottom of it. It's turtles on top of turtles. Can we get to the bottom turtle and say
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hello? Well, maybe I can put it to you this way in a way that I often begin discussions in a class
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on the history of science and so on, and say, I'm looking at you. Yes. You are in fact a figment of
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my imagination. You have a messed up imagination, yes. Well, what do I mean by that? If I were a
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dragonfly looking at you, whatever my nervous system would form by way of a perceptual structure
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would clearly be utterly different from what my brain and perceptual system altogether is forming
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when I look at you. Who's right? Is it me or the dragonfly?
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Well, the dragonfly is certainly very impressive, so I don't know. But yes, the observer matters.
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What is that supposed to tell us about objective reality?
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Well, I think it means that it's very difficult to get beyond the constructs that our perceptual
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system is leading us to. When we make apparatus and devices and so on, we're still making things,
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the results of which or the outputs of which we process perceptually in various ways.
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An analogy I like to use with students sometimes is this. All right, they all have their laptops
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open in front of them, of course. I've sent them something to read, and I say, okay, click on it
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and open it up. PDF opens up. I said, what are you looking at? They said, well, I'm looking at the
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paper that you sent me. I said, no, you're not. What you're looking at is what you're looking at
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is a stream of light coming off LEDs or LCDs coming off a screen. And I said, what happens when you
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00:28:06.000
use your mouse and move that fake piece of paper on the screen around? What are you doing? You're
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00:28:12.320
not moving a piece of paper around, are you? You're moving a construct around, a construct
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00:28:18.080
that's being processed so that our perceptual system can interact with it in the way we
link |
00:28:24.080
interact with pieces of paper. Yes. But it's not real. So, are there things outside of the reach
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00:28:34.800
of science? Can you maybe, as an example, talk about consciousness? I'm asking for a friend
link |
00:28:43.120
trying to figure this thing out. Well, boy, I mean, I read a fair bit of science, but I don't
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00:28:52.640
know. I read a fair bit about that, but I certainly can't really say much about it.
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00:29:02.880
I'm a materialist in the deepest sense of the term. I don't think there is anything out there
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00:29:09.280
except material structures which interact in various ways. Do I think, for example,
link |
00:29:16.480
that this bottle of water is conscious? No, I do not. Although, how would I know? I can't talk to
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00:29:23.920
it. Yeah. But, so what do... It's a hypothesis you have. It's an opinion, an educated opinion
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00:29:29.760
that may be very wrong. Well, I know that you're conscious because I can interact directly with you.
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00:29:35.200
But am I? Well, unless you're a figment of my imagination, of course. Or I'm a robot that's
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00:29:41.040
able to generate the illusion of consciousness effectively enough to facilitate a good
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00:29:48.640
conversation. Because we humans do want to pretend that we're talking to other conscious beings.
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00:29:52.560
That's how we respect them. If it's not conscious, we don't respect them. We're not good at talking
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00:29:56.880
to robots. That's true. Of course, we generalize from our own inner sense, which is the kind of
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00:30:01.280
thing Descartes said from the beginning. We generalize from that. But I do think that
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00:30:07.120
consciousness must be something, whatever it is, that occurs as a result of some particular
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00:30:14.240
organizational structure of material elements. Does materialism mean that it's all within the
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00:30:24.400
reach of science? My sense would be that, especially as neuroscience progresses more and more and
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00:30:35.680
at Caltech, we just built a whole neuroscience arena and so on. And as more knowledge is gained
link |
00:30:44.320
about the ways in which animals, when they behave, what patterns show up at various parts of the
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00:30:52.800
brain and nervous system, and perhaps extending it to humans eventually as well, we'll get more of a
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00:31:00.480
we'll get more of a handle on what brain activity is associated with experiences that we have as
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00:31:12.880
humans. Can we move from the brain activity to the experiences in terms of our perception? No,
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00:31:20.560
you can't. Perception is perception. That's the hypothesis, once again.
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00:31:26.560
Maybe consciousness is just one of the laws of physics that's yet to be discovered. Maybe it
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00:31:35.760
permeates all matter. Maybe it's as simple as trying to plug it in and plug into the ability
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00:31:44.800
to generate and control that kind of law of physics that would crack open. Or we would understand
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00:31:52.000
that the bottle of water is in fact conscious, just much less conscious than us humans,
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00:31:56.880
and then we would be able to generate beings that are more conscious.
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00:32:02.080
Well, that'll be unfortunate. I'd have to stop drinking the water after that.
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00:32:06.400
Every time you take a sip, there's a little bit of suffering going on.
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00:32:11.360
Right.
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00:32:12.320
What do you use the most interesting, beautiful moments in the history of science? What stands
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00:32:18.080
out? And then we can pull at that thread.
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00:32:22.160
Right. Well, I like to think of events that have a major impact and involve both beautiful,
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00:32:34.560
conceptual, mathematical, if we're talking physical structures work, and are associated as
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00:32:41.440
well with probing experimental situations. So among my favorites is one of the most famous,
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00:32:51.520
which was the young Isaac Newton's work with the colors produced when you pass sunlight through a
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00:32:59.040
prism. And why do I like that? It's not profoundly mathematical in one sense. It doesn't need it
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00:33:08.720
initially. It needs the following though, which begins to show you I think a little bit about what
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00:33:14.320
gets involved when you've got a smart individual who's trying to monkey around with stuff and
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00:33:19.440
finds new things about it. First, let me say that the prevailing notion going back to antiquity
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00:33:26.560
was that colors are produced in a sense by modifying or tinting white light, that they're
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00:33:34.720
modifications of white light. In other words, the colors are not in the sunlight in any way.
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00:33:43.520
Now, what Newton did following experiments done by Descartes before him who came to very different
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00:33:49.680
conclusions, he took a prism. You might ask, where do you get prisms in the 1660s? County fairs,
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00:33:59.680
they were very popular. They were pretty crude with bubbles in them and everything,
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00:34:03.840
but they produced colors. So you could buy them at county fairs and things very popular.
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00:34:08.000
Oh, so they were modifying the white light to create colors.
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00:34:11.360
Well, they were creating colors from it, well known. And what he did was the following. He
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00:34:18.400
was by this time, even though he's very young, a very good mathematician. And he could use the
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00:34:26.320
then known laws for how light behaves when it goes through glass to calculate what should happen
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00:34:32.320
if you took light from the sun, passed it from a hole, through a little hole, then hit the prism,
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00:34:39.600
goes out of the prism, strikes a wall a long distance away and makes a splash of light,
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00:34:45.040
never mind the colors for a moment, makes a splash of light there. He was very smart.
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00:34:50.400
First of all, he abstracts from the colors themselves, even though that's what everybody's
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00:34:56.080
paying attention to initially. Because what he knows is this, he knows that if you take
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00:35:01.760
this prism and you turn it to a certain particular angle, that he knew what it should be because he
link |
00:35:09.760
could calculate things. Very few other people in Europe at the time could calculate things like he
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00:35:16.320
could. That if you turn the prism to that particular angle, then the sun, which is, of course, a
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00:35:23.280
circle, when its light passes through this little hole and then into the prism on the far distant
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00:35:30.160
wall, should still make a circle. But it doesn't. It makes a very long image. And this led him to a
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00:35:43.520
very different conception of light, indicating that there are different types of light in the
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00:35:48.800
sunlight. Now, to go beyond that, what's particularly interesting, I think, is the following.
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00:35:54.640
When he published this paper, which got him into a controversy, he really didn't describe
link |
00:36:02.320
at all what he did. He just gave you some numbers. Now, I just told you that you had to set this
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00:36:08.000
prism at a certain angle, right? You would think, because we do have his notes and so on,
link |
00:36:16.320
you would think that he took some kind of complicated measuring device to set the prism.
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00:36:22.080
He didn't. He held it in his hand. That's all. And he twiddled it around. And what was he doing?
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00:36:30.320
It turns out that when you twiddle the prism around at the point where you should get a circle
link |
00:36:36.960
from a circle, it also is the place where the image does not move very fast. So if you want
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00:36:43.840
to get close to there, you just twiddle it. This is manipulative experimentation taking advantage
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00:36:52.880
through his mathematical knowledge of the inherent inaccuracies that let you come to
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00:37:00.800
exact conclusions, regardless of the built in problematics of measurement. He's the only one
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00:37:09.040
I know of doing anything like that at the time. Yeah. Well, even still, there's very few people
link |
00:37:15.840
that are able to have to calculate as well as he did to be a theoretician and an experimentalist,
link |
00:37:23.600
like in the same moment. It's true, although until really well into the 20th century,
link |
00:37:35.360
maybe the beginning of the 20th century, really, most of the most significant experimental results
link |
00:37:45.040
produced in the 1800s, which laid the foundations for light, electricity, electrodynamics, and so on,
link |
00:37:53.520
even hydrodynamics and whatnot, were also produced by people who are both excellent calculators,
link |
00:38:02.960
very talented mathematicians, and good with their hands experimentally.
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00:38:11.360
And then that led to the 21st century with Enrico Fermi that one of the last people that
link |
00:38:18.640
was able to do that, both of those things very well, and that he built a little device
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00:38:25.200
called an atomic bomb that has some positives and negatives.
link |
00:38:28.960
Well, right. Of course, that actually did involve some pretty large scale elaborate
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00:38:34.640
equipment too. Well, holding a prism in your hands.
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00:38:38.800
Right. No. What's the controversy that Newton got into with that paper when he published it?
link |
00:38:45.840
Well, in a number of ways, it's a complicated story. There was a very talented character
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00:38:54.560
known as a mechanic. Mechanic means somebody who was a craftsman who could build and make
link |
00:39:00.240
really good stuff. And he was very talented. His name was Robert Hooke. And he was the guy who
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00:39:06.480
at the weekly meetings of the Royal Society in London, and Newton's not in London, he's at
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00:39:11.280
Cambridge, he's a young guy, he would demonstrate new things. And he was very clever. And he had
link |
00:39:18.160
written a book, in fact, called the Micrographia, which by the way, he used a microscope to make
link |
00:39:26.480
the first depictions of things like a fly's eye, the structure of, you know, it had a big influence.
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00:39:31.920
And in there, he also talked about light. And so he had a different view of light. And when he read
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00:39:36.880
what Newton wrote, he had a double reaction. On the one hand, he said, anything in there that is
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00:39:44.480
correct, I already knew. And anything that I didn't already know, is probably not right anyway.
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00:39:51.680
Trey Lockerbie I gotta love egos. Okay. Can we just step
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00:39:58.320
back? Can you say who was Isaac Newton? What are the things he contributed to this world
link |
00:40:05.200
in the space of ideas? Wow. Who was he? He was born in 1642,
link |
00:40:20.000
and near the small town of Grantham in England. In fact, the house he was born in,
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00:40:26.080
and that his mother died in is still there and can be visited.
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00:40:29.280
His father died before he was born. And his mother eventually remarried a man named
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00:40:41.760
Reverend Smith, whom Newton did not like at all. Because Reverend Smith took his mother away to
link |
00:40:52.160
live with him a few miles away, leaving Newton to be brought up more or less by his grandmother
link |
00:40:57.200
over there. And he had huge resentment about that his whole life.
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00:41:02.880
I think that gives you a little inkling that a little bit of trauma in childhood,
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00:41:08.320
maybe a complicated father son relationship can be useful to create a good scientist.
link |
00:41:13.920
Could be, although this case, it would be right, the absent father, non father relationship,
link |
00:41:19.120
so to speak. He was known as a kid, little that we do know for being very clever about
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00:41:26.240
flying kites. And there are stories about him putting candles and putting flying kites and
link |
00:41:34.640
scaring the living devil out of people at night by doing that and things like that,
link |
00:41:39.120
making things. Most of the physicists and natural philosophers I've dealt with actually,
link |
00:41:48.080
as children, were very fond of making and playing with things. I can't think of one I know of who
link |
00:41:54.400
wasn't actually, very good with their hands and whatnot. His mother wanted him to take over the
link |
00:42:06.640
manor. It was a kind of farming manor. They were the class of what are known as yeomans.
link |
00:42:12.160
There are stories that he wasn't very good at that. One day, one of the stories is he's sitting
link |
00:42:17.600
out in the field and the cows come home without him and he doesn't know what's going on. Anyway,
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00:42:24.480
had relatives and he manages to get to Cambridge, sent to Cambridge because he's known to be smart.
link |
00:42:30.960
He's read books that he got from local dignitaries and some relatives. And he goes there as what's
link |
00:42:37.600
known as a sub sizer. What does that mean? Well, it's not too pleasant. Basically, a sub sizer
link |
00:42:43.200
was a student who had to clean the bed pans of the richer kids. That didn't last too long.
link |
00:42:50.960
He makes his way and he becomes absorbed in some of the new ways of thinking that are being talked
link |
00:43:00.240
about on the parts of Descartes and others as well. There's also the traditional curriculum,
link |
00:43:06.560
which he follows. And we have his notes. We have his student notebooks and so on. We can see
link |
00:43:12.400
gradually this young man's mind focusing and coming to grips with deeper questions of the
link |
00:43:20.240
nature of the world and perception even, and how we know things and also probing and learning
link |
00:43:28.640
mathematical structures to such an extent that he builds on some of the investigations that had been
link |
00:43:35.760
done in the period before him to create the foundations of a way of investigating processes
link |
00:43:43.200
that happen and change continuously instead of by leaps and bounds and so on, forming the
link |
00:43:50.000
foundation of what we now call the calculus. Yeah. So can you maybe just paint a little bit
link |
00:43:56.160
of a picture you've already started of what were the things that bothered him the most
link |
00:44:04.000
that stood out to him the most about the traditional curriculum, about the way people
link |
00:44:11.280
saw the world? You mentioned discrete versus continuous. Is there something where he began
link |
00:44:16.080
thinking in a revolutionary way? Because it's fascinating. Most of us go to college,
link |
00:44:22.560
Cambridge or otherwise, and we just kind of take what we hear as gospel, right? Like not gospel,
link |
00:44:30.560
but as like facts. You don't begin to sort of see how can I expand on this aggressively or how can
link |
00:44:39.440
I challenge everything that I hear rigorously, mathematically through the... I mean, I don't even
link |
00:44:46.960
know how rigorous the mathematics was at that point. I'm sure it was geometry and so on,
link |
00:44:52.480
no calculus, huh? There are elements of what turned into the calculus that predate Newton,
link |
00:45:00.160
but... How much rigor was there? How much... Well, rigor, no. And then, of course, no scientific
link |
00:45:06.560
method. Not really. I mean, somewhat. I mean, appreciation of data. That is a separate question
link |
00:45:15.120
from a question of method. Appreciation of data is a significant question as to what you do with
link |
00:45:20.960
data. There's lots of things you're asking. I apologize. So maybe let's backtrack in the first
link |
00:45:26.320
question. Was there something that was bothering him that he especially thought he could contribute
link |
00:45:32.640
or work on? Well, of course, we can't go back and talk to him, but we do have these student
link |
00:45:38.480
notebooks. There's two of them. One's called The Philosophical Questions and the other is called
link |
00:45:43.920
The Waste Book. The Philosophical Questions has discussions of the nature of reality and
link |
00:45:49.840
various issues concerning it. And The Waste Book has things that have to do with motion in various
link |
00:45:55.760
ways, what happens in collisions and things of that sort. And it's a complicated story,
link |
00:46:01.760
but what's among the things that I think are interesting is he took notes in The Philosophical
link |
00:46:07.760
Questions on stuff that was traditionally given to you in the curriculums going back several hundred
link |
00:46:17.120
years, namely on what scholars refer to as scholastic or neo scholastic ways of thinking
link |
00:46:25.840
about the world dating back to the reformulation of Aristotle in the Middle Ages by Thomas Aquinas
link |
00:46:32.800
in the church. This is a totally different way of thinking about things, which actually connects to
link |
00:46:37.840
something we were saying a moment ago. For instance, so I'm wearing a blue shirt and I will
link |
00:46:45.760
sometimes ask students, where is the blue? And they'll usually say, well, it's in your shirt.
link |
00:46:52.080
And then some of them get clear and they say, well, no, you know, light is striking it,
link |
00:46:56.240
photons are reemitted, they strike the back of your retina and et cetera, et cetera. And I said,
link |
00:47:01.360
yes. What that means is that the blue is actually an artifact of our perceptual system considered as
link |
00:47:10.880
the percept of blue. It's not out there, it's in here. That's not how things were thought about
link |
00:47:21.040
well into the 16th century. The general notion dating back even to Aristotelian antiquity
link |
00:47:28.800
and formalized by the 12th century at Paris, Oxford and elsewhere is that qualities are there
link |
00:47:39.120
in the world. They're not in us. We have senses and our senses can be wrong. You could go blind,
link |
00:47:48.400
things like that. But if they're working properly, you get the actual qualities of the world.
link |
00:47:55.440
Now, that break, which is occurring towards the end of the 16th century and is most visible in
link |
00:48:02.960
Descartes, is the break between conceiving that the qualities of the world are very different
link |
00:48:12.160
from the qualities that we perceive. That in fact, the qualities of the world consist almost
link |
00:48:17.920
entirely in shapes of various kinds and maybe hard particles or whatever, but not colors,
link |
00:48:28.640
not sounds, not smells, not softness and hardness. They're not in the world, they're in us.
link |
00:48:37.840
That break Newton is picking up as he reads Descartes. He's going to disagree with a lot in
link |
00:48:43.280
Descartes, but that break he is, among other things, picking up very strongly. And that
link |
00:48:50.800
underlies a lot of the way he works later on when he becomes skeptical of the evidence provided
link |
00:48:58.080
by the senses. Yeah, that's actually, I don't know, the way you're describing is so powerful.
link |
00:49:05.040
It just makes me realize how liberating that is as a scientist, as somebody who's trying
link |
00:49:11.920
to understand reality, that our senses are not to be trusted, that reality is to be investigated
link |
00:49:24.480
through tools that are beyond our senses. Yes, or that improve our senses in some ways.
link |
00:49:34.320
That's pretty powerful. For a human being to realize I can't trust my own senses at that time,
link |
00:49:49.680
that's pretty trippy. It's coming in, it's coming in. And I think it arises probably a fair number
link |
00:49:59.040
of decades before that, perhaps in part with all chemical experimentation and manipulations,
link |
00:50:05.520
that you have to go through elaborate structures to produce things and ways you think about it.
link |
00:50:13.280
But let me give you an example that I think you might find interesting because it's from
link |
00:50:17.680
it involves that guy named Hooke that Newton had an argument with. And he had lots of arguments
link |
00:50:24.640
with Hooke, although Hooke was a very clever guy and gave him some things that stimulated him later.
link |
00:50:30.400
Anyway, Hooke, who was argumentative, and he really was convinced that the only way to gain
link |
00:50:38.720
real knowledge of nature is through carefully constructed devices. And he was an expert
link |
00:50:48.080
mechanic, if you will, at building such things. Now, there was a rather wealthy man in Danzig
link |
00:51:00.320
by the name of Hevelius, Latinized name. He was a brewer in town. And he had become very
link |
00:51:06.720
fascinated with the telescope. This is 30 years or so, 20 or 30 years after the telescope had
link |
00:51:14.720
moved out and become more common. And he built a large observatory on the top of his brewery,
link |
00:51:21.920
actually. And working with his wife, they used these very elaborately constructed
link |
00:51:32.080
grass and metal instruments to make observations of positions of the stars. And he published a whole
link |
00:51:37.600
new catalog of where the stars are. And he claimed it was incredibly accurate. He claimed it was so
link |
00:51:45.120
accurate that nothing had ever come close to it. Hooke reads this, and he says, wait a minute,
link |
00:51:51.120
you didn't use a telescope here of any kind, because what's the point? Unless you do something
link |
00:51:56.960
to the telescope, all you see are dots with stars. You just use your eyes. Your eyes can't be that
link |
00:52:02.480
good. It's impossible. So what did Hooke do to prove this? He said, what you should have done
link |
00:52:08.000
is you should have put a little device in the telescope that lets you measure distances between
link |
00:52:12.720
these dots. You didn't do that. And because you didn't, there's no way you could have been that
link |
00:52:17.440
good. At two successive meetings of the Royal Society, he hauls the members out into the courtyard
link |
00:52:28.000
and he takes a card and he makes successive black and white stripes on the card. And he pastes the
link |
00:52:34.960
card up on a wall and he takes them one by one. He says, now move back looking at it, presumably
link |
00:52:42.080
with one eye, until you can't tell the black ones from the white stripes. He says, that I can then
link |
00:52:48.960
measure the distance. I can see the angles. I can give a number then for what is the best possible,
link |
00:52:57.360
what we would call perceptual acuity of human vision. And it turned out, he thought, to be
link |
00:53:05.280
something like 10 or more times worse than this guy Hevelius had claimed. So obviously he says,
link |
00:53:12.560
Hooke, Hevelius. Well, years ago, I calculated Hevelius's numbers and so on using modern
link |
00:53:22.080
tables from NASA and so on. And they are even more accurate than Hevelius claimed. And worse than
link |
00:53:28.000
that, the Royal Society sent a young astronomer named Halley over to Dantzig to work with him.
link |
00:53:35.600
And Halley writes back and he says, I couldn't believe it, but he taught me how to do it.
link |
00:53:41.120
And I could get just as good as he. How is it possible? Well, here, this shows you something
link |
00:53:46.080
very interesting about experiments, perception and everything else. Hooke was right, but he was also
link |
00:53:52.400
wrong. He was wrong for the right reasons and he was right for the wrong reasons. And what do I
link |
00:53:59.200
mean by that? What he actually found was the number for what we now call 2020 vision. He was
link |
00:54:09.040
right. You can't tell, except a few people, much better than that. But he was observing the wrong
link |
00:54:16.960
thing. What Hevelius was observing was a bright dot, a star, moving past a pointer.
link |
00:54:28.240
Our eyes are rather similar to frogs eyes. You know, I'm sure you've heard the story. If I hold
link |
00:54:34.960
a dead fly on a string in front of a frog and don't move it, the frog pays no attention. As soon
link |
00:54:41.360
as I move the fly, the frog immediately tongue lats out because the visual system of the frog
link |
00:54:48.960
responds to motion. So does ours and our acuity for distinguishing motion from statics, five or
link |
00:54:58.160
more times better. Yeah, that's fascinating. Damn. And of course, I mean, maybe you can comment on
link |
00:55:06.240
their understanding of the human perceptual system at the time. It's probably really terrible.
link |
00:55:12.080
Like, yeah, like I've recently been working with just almost as a fun side thing with vision
link |
00:55:16.800
scientists and peripheral vision. It's a, it's a beautiful, complex mess. That whole thing,
link |
00:55:23.200
we still don't understand all the weird ways that human perception works. And they were probably
link |
00:55:29.120
terrible at it. They probably didn't even have any conceptual peripheral vision or anything like
link |
00:55:34.400
any conceptual peripheral vision or, or the fovea or, or, I mean, basically anything.
link |
00:55:41.680
They had some, I mean, because actually it was Newton himself who probed a lot of this. For
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00:55:46.320
instance, Newton, the young Newton trying to work his way around what's going on with colors,
link |
00:55:53.920
wanted to try and distinguish colors that occur through natural processes out there and colors
link |
00:56:01.440
that are a result of our eyes not operating whites. You know what he did? It's a famous thing.
link |
00:56:06.960
He took a stick and he stuck that stick under his lower eyelid and pushed up on his eyeball.
link |
00:56:14.640
And what that did, what produced colored circles at diametrically opposite positions of the stick
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00:56:22.960
in the eyeball. And he moved it around to see how they moved, trying to distinguish.
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00:56:27.600
Legit. Right? I always have to tell my students don't do this, but.
link |
00:56:34.320
Or do it if you want to be great and remembered by human history. That's, there's a lot of
link |
00:56:40.960
equivalent to sticking a stick into your eye in modern day that may pay off in the end. Okay.
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00:56:51.360
As a small aside, is the Newton and the Apple story true?
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00:56:55.120
No. Was it a different fruit?
link |
00:57:00.240
As a colleague of mine named Simon Schaffer in England once said on a Nova program that we were
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00:57:06.560
both on, the role of fruit in the history of science has been vastly exaggerated.
link |
00:57:13.920
Okay. So was there any, I mean, to, to the zoom out moments of epiphany,
link |
00:57:19.840
is, is there something to moments of epiphany? Oh, again, this is the paradigm shift versus the
link |
00:57:24.480
gradualism. There is a shift. It's a much more complex one than that. And we,
link |
00:57:33.920
as it happens, a colleague of mine and I are writing a paper right now on one of the aspects
link |
00:57:39.040
of these things based on the work that many of our colleagues have done over the last 30 and 40 years.
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00:57:44.960
Let me try and see if I could put it to you this way. Newton, until the early 1670s and probably
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00:57:56.320
really until a fair time after that, first of all, was not very interested in questions of motion.
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00:58:03.680
He was working actually in all chemical relationships or what is called by historians
link |
00:58:09.360
chymistry, a kind of early modern chemical structure. Colleagues of ours at Indiana have
link |
00:58:15.600
even reproduced the amalgams that, you know, anyway, his way of thinking about motion involved
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00:58:23.680
a certain set of relationships, which was not conducive to any application of motion.
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00:58:35.120
Not conducive to any application that would yield computationally direct results for things like
link |
00:58:46.000
planetary motions, which he wasn't terribly interested in anyway. He enters a correspondence
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00:58:54.720
with his original nemesis, Robert Hooke. And Hooke says, well, have you ever thought about,
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00:59:00.560
and then Hooke tells him a certain way you might think about it. And when Newton hears that,
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00:59:06.800
he recognizes that there is a way to inject time that would enable him to solve certain problems.
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00:59:14.240
It's not that there was anything he thought before that was contrary to that way of thinking,
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00:59:21.520
it's just that that particular technical insight was not something that,
link |
00:59:28.160
for a lot of reasons that are complex, had never occurred to him at all. And that sent him a
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00:59:34.560
different way of thinking. But to answer your question about the Apple business, which is always
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00:59:39.760
about, you know, gravity and the moon and all of that being, no. The reason there is that the idea
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00:59:48.000
that what goes on here in the neighborhood of the earth and what goes on at the moon,
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00:59:55.760
at the moon, let us say, remind the sun and the planets, can be due to a direct relationship
link |
01:00:03.360
between the earth, let's say, and the moon, is contrary to fundamental beliefs held by many of
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01:00:13.520
the mechanical philosophers, as they're called at the time, in which everything has to involve
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01:00:18.720
at least a sequence of direct contacts, has to be something between here and there that's involved.
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01:00:26.400
And Hooke, probably not thinking terribly deeply about it, based on what he said,
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01:00:33.440
along with others, like the architect and mathematician Christopher Wren,
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01:00:37.840
harken back to the notion that, well, maybe there is a kind of magnetic relationship between the
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01:00:44.160
moon and maybe the planets and the earth and gravity and so on, vague, but establishing a
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01:00:49.600
direct connection somehow, however it's happening, forget about it. Newton wouldn't have cared about
link |
01:00:56.240
that, if that's all they said, but it was when Hooke mentioned this different way of thinking
link |
01:01:01.120
about the motion, a way he could certainly have thought of, because it does not contradict
link |
01:01:05.920
anything. Newton is a brilliant mathematician, and he could see that you could suddenly start
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01:01:13.840
to do things with that, that you otherwise wouldn't, and this led eventually to another
link |
01:01:19.840
controversy with Hooke, in which Hooke said, well, after Newton published his Great Principia,
link |
01:01:25.360
I gave him how to do this. And then Newton, of course, got ticked off about that and said, well,
link |
01:01:30.240
listen to this, I did everything, and because he had a picayune little idea,
link |
01:01:34.640
he thinks he can take credit for it. Okay. So his ability to play with his ideas mathematically is
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01:01:43.040
what solidified the initial intuition that you could have. Was that the first time he was born,
link |
01:01:48.000
the idea that you have action at a distance, that you can have forces without contact,
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01:01:54.000
which is another revolutionary idea? I would say that in the sense of dealing with
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01:02:02.000
the mechanics of force like effects considered to act at some distance, it is novel with both
link |
01:02:14.160
Hooke and Newton at the time. The notion that two things might interact at a distance with one
link |
01:02:21.200
another without direct contact, that goes back to antiquity. Only there it would be thought of
link |
01:02:26.240
more as a sympathetic reaction to a magnet and a piece of iron. They have a kind of mutual sympathy
link |
01:02:35.600
for one another. Like what? Love? What are we talking about? Actually, they do sometimes talk
link |
01:02:41.520
like that. That is love. See, now I talk like that all the time. I think love is somehow
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01:02:49.040
in consciousness or forces of physics that yet to be discovered. Okay. Now there's the other side
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01:02:58.720
of things, which is calculus that you began to talk about. So Newton brought a lot of things
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01:03:03.760
to this world. One of them is calculus. What is calculus? And what was Newton's role in bringing
link |
01:03:13.040
it to life? What was it like? What was the story of bringing calculus to this world? Well, since
link |
01:03:21.200
the publication starting many decades ago by Tom Whiteside, who's now deceased, of Newton's
link |
01:03:28.000
mathematical papers, we know a lot about how he was pushing things and how he was developing things.
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01:03:34.640
It's a complex question to say what calculus is. Calculus is the set of mathematical techniques
link |
01:03:42.560
that enable you to investigate what we now call functions, mathematical functions,
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01:03:49.840
which are continuous. That is, that are not formed out of discrete sets like the counting numbers,
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01:03:58.800
for instance. Newton, there were already procedures for solving problems involving
link |
01:04:11.520
such things as finding areas to under curves and tangents to curves by using geometrical structures,
link |
01:04:20.720
but only for certain limited types of curves, if you will. Newton as a young man, we know this is
link |
01:04:31.520
what happened, is looking at a formula which involves an expansion in separate terms, polynomial
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01:04:42.160
terms, as we say, for certain functions. I know I don't want to get complicated here about this,
link |
01:04:48.880
and he realizes it could be generalized. And he tries the generalization and that leads him to
link |
01:04:55.920
an expansion formula called the binomial theorem. That enables him to move ahead with the notion
link |
01:05:03.840
that if I take something that has a certain value, and I add a little bit to it, and I use
link |
01:05:10.960
this binomial theorem and expand things out, I can begin to do new things. And the new things that
link |
01:05:17.360
he begins to do leads him to a recognition that the calculations of areas and the calculations
link |
01:05:24.960
of tangents to curves are reciprocal to one another. And the procedures that he develops
link |
01:05:33.920
is a particular form of the calculus in which he considers small increments and then continuous
link |
01:05:43.520
flows and changes of curves and so on. And we have relics of it in physics today, the notation
link |
01:05:52.560
in which you put a dot over a variable indicating the rate of change of the variable. That's
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01:05:59.360
Newton's original type of notation. The dot. Yeah, the dot notation.
link |
01:06:09.920
Possibly independently of Newton, because he didn't publish this thing, although he became
link |
01:06:16.560
quite well known as quite a brilliant young man, in part because people heard about his work and
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01:06:24.720
so on. When another young man by the name of Gottfried Leibniz visited London and he heard
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01:06:34.320
about these things, it is said that he independently develops his form of the calculus,
link |
01:06:42.160
which is actually the form we use today, both in notation and perhaps in certain
link |
01:06:47.840
fundamental ways of thinking. It has remained a controversial point as to where exactly and how
link |
01:06:56.160
much independently Leibniz did it. Leibniz aficionados think and continue to maintain he
link |
01:07:02.400
did it completely independently. Newton, when he became president of the Royal Society, put together
link |
01:07:08.000
a group to go on the attack saying, no, he must have taken everything. We don't know.
link |
01:07:14.720
But I will tell you this. About 25 or so years ago, a scholar who's a professor at Indiana now
link |
01:07:23.920
named Domenico Melli got his hands on a Leibniz manuscript called the Tentamen,
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01:07:31.440
which was Leibniz's attempt to produce an alternative to Newton's mechanics.
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01:07:36.720
Mm hmm.
link |
01:07:37.760
And it comes to some conclusions that you have in Newton's mechanics. Well, he published that,
link |
01:07:43.360
but Melli got the manuscript. And what Melli found out was that Leibniz reverse engineered
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01:07:49.520
the Principia and cooked it backwards so that he could get the results he wanted.
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01:07:55.520
That was for the mechanics. So that means his mind allows for that kind of thing.
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01:07:59.680
Some people.
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01:08:00.960
You're breaking some news today. You're starting some whole drama.
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01:08:04.320
Some people think so. I think most historians of mathematics do not agree with that.
link |
01:08:09.840
A friend of mine, rather well known physicist, unfortunately, died a couple of years ago named
link |
01:08:15.280
Mike Nowenberg at UC Santa Cruz, had some evidence along those lines. Didn't pass mustard
link |
01:08:23.040
with many of my friends who are historians of math. In fact, I edit with a historian of math,
link |
01:08:28.720
a technical journal, and we were unable to publish it in there because we couldn't get
link |
01:08:33.920
it through any of our colleagues. But I am, I remain suspicious.
link |
01:08:41.920
What is it about those tense relationships and that kind of drama? Einstein doesn't
link |
01:08:47.040
appear to have much of that drama. Nobody claimed, I haven't heard claims that they've,
link |
01:08:53.360
perhaps because it's such crazy ideas, of any of his major inventions, major ideas,
link |
01:09:00.640
being those that are basically, I came up with it first or independently. There's not,
link |
01:09:07.360
as far as I'm aware, not many people talk about general relativity, especially in those terms.
link |
01:09:12.880
But with Newton, that was the case. I mean, is that just a natural outgrowth of how science works?
link |
01:09:20.320
Is there going to be personalities that, I'm not saying this about Linus, but maybe I am,
link |
01:09:25.040
but there's people who steal ideas for the, because of ego, because of all those kinds of things.
link |
01:09:35.040
I don't think it's all that common, frankly. The Newton book, Leibniz, Contratemps and so on.
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01:09:43.040
Well, you're at the beginnings of a lot of things there and so on. These are difficult
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01:09:48.240
and complex times as well. These are times in which science as an activity pursued by other than,
link |
01:09:57.920
let us say, interested aristocrats is becoming something somewhat different. It's not
link |
01:10:05.440
a professional community of investigators in the same way. It's also a period in which
link |
01:10:12.000
procedures and rules or practice are being developed to avoid attacking one another directly
link |
01:10:23.120
and pulling out a sword to cut off the other guy's head if he disagrees with you and so on.
link |
01:10:28.960
So it's a very different period. Controversies happen. People get angry. I can think of a number
link |
01:10:35.440
of others, including in the development of optics in the 19th century and so on, and it can get hot
link |
01:10:42.560
under the collar. Sometimes one character who's worked an area extensively, whether they've come
link |
01:10:50.640
up with something terribly novel or not, and somebody else kind of moves in and does completely
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01:10:57.840
different and novel things, the first guy gets upset about it because he's sort of muscled into
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01:11:03.840
what I thought was my area. You find that sort of stuff. But do you have examples of cases where it
link |
01:11:10.240
worked out well, like that competition is good for the progress of science? Yeah, it almost always is
link |
01:11:16.240
good in that sense. It's just painful for the individuals involved. It can be. It doesn't have
link |
01:11:21.520
to be nasty, although sometimes it is. So for the example with optics, could you comment on that one?
link |
01:11:28.880
Well, yeah, sure. There are several, but I could give you... All right, so I'll give you this
link |
01:11:36.720
example that probably is the most pertinent. The first polytechnic school like MIT or Caltech was
link |
01:11:49.280
actually founded in France during the French Revolution. It exists today. It's the Ecole
link |
01:11:53.760
Polytechnique. Two people who were there were two young men in the 90s, 1790s named on the one hand
link |
01:12:06.160
Francois Arago and the other Jean Baptiste Biot. They both lived a long time, well into the 1850s.
link |
01:12:13.600
Arago became a major administrator of science and Biot's career started to peter out after about the
link |
01:12:22.160
late teens. Now, they are sent on an expedition, which was one of the expeditions involving
link |
01:12:30.880
measuring things to start the metric system. There's a lot more to that story. Anyway,
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01:12:36.320
they come back. Arago gets separated. He's captured by pirates actually. Wounds up in
link |
01:12:46.560
Tangier, escapes, is captured again. Everybody thinks he's dead. He gets back to Paris and so on.
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01:12:55.440
He's greeted as a hero and whatnot. In the meantime, Biot has pretty much published some
link |
01:13:00.640
of the stuff that he's done and Arago doesn't get much credit for it and Arago starts to get very
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01:13:05.680
angry and Biot is known for this kind of thing. Biot starts investigating a new phenomenon in
link |
01:13:17.920
optics involving something called polarization and he writes all kinds of stuff on it. Arago
link |
01:13:25.920
looks into this and decides to write some things as well and actually Biot gets mostly interested
link |
01:13:33.040
in it when he finds out that Arago is doing stuff. Now, Biot is actually the better scientist
link |
01:13:38.880
in a lot of ways, but Arago is furious about this. So furious that he actually demands and
link |
01:13:46.800
forces the leader of French science, Laplace, the Marquis de Laplace and cohorts to write a note in
link |
01:13:57.360
the published journal saying, oh, excuse us, actually Arago, et cetera, et cetera, blah, blah.
link |
01:14:05.760
So Arago continues to just hold this antipathy and fear of Biot. So what happens? 1815,
link |
01:14:17.920
Napoleon is finished at Waterloo. A young Frenchman by the name of Augustin Fresnel
link |
01:14:24.240
who was in the army is going back to his home on the north coast of France in Normandy,
link |
01:14:31.040
passes through Paris. Arago is friends with Fresnel's uncle who's the head of the École des
link |
01:14:39.360
Beaux Arts at the time. Anyway, Fresnel is already interested in certain things in light
link |
01:14:45.680
and he talks to Arago. Arago tells him a few things. Fresnel goes home and Fresnel is a
link |
01:14:51.200
brilliant experimenter. He observes things and he's a very good mathematician, calculates things,
link |
01:15:00.080
he writes something up, he sends it to Arago. Arago looks at it and Arago says to himself,
link |
01:15:06.080
I can use this to get back at Biot. He brings Fresnel to Paris, sets him up in
link |
01:15:13.200
a room at the observatory where Arago is for Fresnel to continue his work. Paper after paper
link |
01:15:19.680
comes out undercutting everything Biot had done. What is it about jealousy and just envy that
link |
01:15:31.200
could be an engine of creativity and productivity versus like an Einstein where it seems like not?
link |
01:15:40.960
I don't know which one is better. I guess it depends on the personality. Both are useful
link |
01:15:44.480
engines in science. Well, in this particular story, it's maybe even more interesting because
link |
01:15:51.280
Fresnel himself, the young guy, he knew what Arago was doing with him and he didn't like it.
link |
01:15:58.080
He didn't want to get with, he wrote his brother said, I don't want to get in an argument with Biot,
link |
01:16:03.120
I just want to do my stuff. Arago is using him, but it's because Arago kept pushing him to go
link |
01:16:10.000
into certain areas that stuff kept coming out. Yeah. Ego is beautiful. Okay. But back to Newton,
link |
01:16:21.040
there's a bunch of things I want to ask, but sort of, let's say since we're on the Leibniz
link |
01:16:26.160
and the topic of drama, let me ask another drama question. Why was Newton a complicated man?
link |
01:16:31.760
We're breaking news today. This is like. Right. Why was he complicated? His
link |
01:16:41.760
brain structure was different. I don't know why. He had a complicated young life, as we've said.
link |
01:16:48.720
He had always been very self contained and solitary. He had acquaintances and friends.
link |
01:16:56.720
And when he moved to London eventually, he had quite a career. A career, for instance, that led
link |
01:17:02.560
him when he was famous by then, the 1690s, he moves to London. He becomes first warden of the
link |
01:17:10.560
mint. The mint is what produces coins and coinage was a complicated thing because there was
link |
01:17:15.520
counterfeiting going on. And he becomes master of the mint to the extent. And a guy at MIT wrote a
link |
01:17:23.360
book about this a little bit. We wrote something on it too. I forget his name was Levin. That Newton
link |
01:17:30.480
sent investigators out to catch these guys and sent at least one of them, a famous one named
link |
01:17:36.640
Challener to the gallows. And one of the reasons he probably was so particularly angry at Challener
link |
01:17:47.280
was Challener had apparently said some nasty things about Newton in front of parliament at
link |
01:17:52.800
some point. Fair enough. That was apparently not a good idea. Well, he had a bit of a temper. So
link |
01:17:58.800
you had a bit of a temper. Clearly. But he even as a young man at Cambridge, though he doesn't come
link |
01:18:08.560
from wealth, he attracts people who recognize his smarts. There's a young fellow named Humphrey
link |
01:18:16.800
Newton shared his rooms. These students always shared rooms with one another, became his kind
link |
01:18:23.680
of amanuensis to write down what Newton was doing and so on. And there were others over time who he
link |
01:18:34.240
befriended in various ways and so on. He was solitary. He had, as far as we know, no relationships
link |
01:18:42.880
with either women or men in anything other than a formal way. The only...
link |
01:18:49.360
Those get in the way relationships.
link |
01:18:51.360
Right. Well, I mean, I don't know if he was close to his mother. I mean, she passed away,
link |
01:18:58.320
everything left him. He went to be with her after she died. He was close to his niece,
link |
01:19:04.160
Catherine Barton, who basically came to run his household when he moved to London and so on. And
link |
01:19:13.200
she married a man named Conduit, who became one of the people who controlled Newton's legacy
link |
01:19:21.920
later on and so on. And you can even see the townhouse that Newton lived in, in those days,
link |
01:19:29.840
still there.
link |
01:19:30.400
All right. So there's the story of Newton coming up with quite a few ideas during a pandemic.
link |
01:19:38.720
We're on the outskirts of a pandemic ourselves.
link |
01:19:42.640
Right.
link |
01:19:43.040
And a lot of people use that example as motivation for everybody while they're
link |
01:19:47.360
in lockdown to get stuff done. So what's that about? Can you tell the story of that?
link |
01:19:53.120
Well, I can. Let me first say that, of course, we've been teaching over Zoom lately.
link |
01:19:58.080
There was no Zoom back then?
link |
01:20:00.080
There was no Zoom back then. Although it wouldn't have made much difference because the story was
link |
01:20:04.480
Newton was so complicated in his lectures that at one point, Humphrey Newton actually said that
link |
01:20:09.920
he might as well have just been lecturing to the walls because nobody was there
link |
01:20:13.600
to listen to it. So what difference?
link |
01:20:15.680
Also not a great teacher, huh?
link |
01:20:18.880
If you look at his optical notes, if that's what he's reading from...
link |
01:20:22.960
Oh, boy. Okay.
link |
01:20:23.840
No.
link |
01:20:27.920
So what can you say about that whole journey through the pandemic that resulted in so much
link |
01:20:35.120
innovation in such a short amount of time?
link |
01:20:37.440
Well, I mean, there's two times that he goes home. Would he have been able to do it and do do it if
link |
01:20:45.280
he'd stayed at Cambridge? I think he would have. I don't think it really... Although I do like to
link |
01:20:50.640
tell my advanced students when I lecture on the history of physics to the physics and chemistry
link |
01:20:55.520
students, especially we've been doing it over Zoom last year, when we get to Newton and so on,
link |
01:21:00.560
because these kids are, you know, 21, 22, I like to say, well, you know, when Newton was your age
link |
01:21:06.960
and he had to go home during an epidemic, do you know what he produced?
link |
01:21:12.320
So can you actually summarize this for people who don't know how old was Newton and what did
link |
01:21:16.320
he produce? Well, Newton goes up to Cambridge, as it said, when he's 18 years old in 1660.
link |
01:21:24.640
And the so called miraculous year, the annus mirabilis, where you get the development
link |
01:21:32.080
in the calculus and in optical discoveries, especially, is 1666, right? So he's, what,
link |
01:21:40.000
24 years old at the time. But judging from the notebooks that I mentioned, he's already,
link |
01:21:48.400
before that, come to an awful lot of developments over the previous couple of years.
link |
01:21:56.720
Does it have much to do with the fact that he twice went home? It is true that the optical
link |
01:22:03.280
experiments that we talked of a while ago with the light on the wall moving up and down were done at
link |
01:22:08.400
home. In fact, you can visit the very room he did it in to this day. Yeah, it's very cool.
link |
01:22:15.120
And if you look through the window in that room, there is an apple tree out there in the garden.
link |
01:22:21.280
So you might be wrong about this. You're lying to me. Maybe there's an apple
link |
01:22:25.600
involved after all. Well, it's not the same apple tree, but it's cuttings.
link |
01:22:29.760
How do you know?
link |
01:22:31.440
They don't last that long, but it's 400 years ago.
link |
01:22:34.560
Oh, wow. I continue with the dumbest questions. Okay. So you're saying that perhaps going home
link |
01:22:43.040
was not... It may have given him an opportunity to work things through. And after all, he did make
link |
01:22:50.160
use of that room and he could do things like put a shade over the window, move things around,
link |
01:22:55.520
cut holes in it and do stuff. Probably in his rooms at Cambridge, maybe not. Although when he
link |
01:23:03.120
stayed at Cambridge subsequently and became a fellow, and then the second Lucasian professor
link |
01:23:10.960
there, he was actually really the first one because Isaac Barrow, who was the mathematician,
link |
01:23:18.080
professor of optics who recognized Newton's genius, gave up what would have been his position
link |
01:23:24.320
because he recognized... Newton may not have learned too much from him, although they did
link |
01:23:30.000
interact. And so Newton was the first Lucasian professor really, the one that Stephen Hawking
link |
01:23:35.920
held till he died. And we know that the rooms that he had there at Cambridge subsequently,
link |
01:23:44.480
those rooms are still there, he built an all chemical furnace outside, did all sorts of stuff
link |
01:23:49.360
in those rooms. And don't forget, you didn't have to do too much as a Lucasian professor.
link |
01:23:57.280
Every so often you had to go give these lectures, whether anybody was there or not,
link |
01:24:01.840
and deposit the notes for the future, which is how we have all those things.
link |
01:24:09.920
Oh, they were stored and now we have them. And now we know just how terrible of a teacher Newton
link |
01:24:15.280
was. Yeah, but we know how brilliant these notes are. In fact, the second volume of Newton's,
link |
01:24:20.560
of the notes really on the great book that he published, The Optics, which he published in 1704,
link |
01:24:27.920
that has just been finished with full annotations and analysis by the greatest analyst of Newton's
link |
01:24:35.920
optics, Alan Shapiro, who retired a few years ago at the University of Minnesota and been working
link |
01:24:42.080
on Newton's optics ever since I knew him and before, and I've known him since 1976.
link |
01:24:48.880
Is there something you could say broadly about either that work on optics or Principia itself
link |
01:24:57.760
as something that I've never actually looked at as a piece of work?
link |
01:25:04.640
Is it powerful in itself or is it just an important moment in history in terms of the
link |
01:25:12.400
amount of inventions that are within, the amount of ideas that are within, or is it a really powerful
link |
01:25:19.280
work in itself? Well, it is a powerful work in itself. You can see this guy coming to grips with
link |
01:25:27.680
and pushing through and working his way around complicated and difficult issues, melding
link |
01:25:34.880
experimental situations which nobody had worked with before, even discovering new things,
link |
01:25:42.400
trying to figure out ways of putting this together with mathematical structures,
link |
01:25:46.320
succeeding and failing at the same time. And we can see him doing that.
link |
01:25:52.480
I mean, what is, what is contained within Principia? I don't even know in terms of the
link |
01:25:58.640
scope of the work. Is it the entirety of the body of work of Newton?
link |
01:26:04.240
No, no, no, no. The Principia Mathematica...
link |
01:26:06.720
Is it calculus?
link |
01:26:08.480
Well, all right. So the Principia is divided into three books.
link |
01:26:14.800
Excellent.
link |
01:26:16.640
Book one contains his version of the laws of motion and the application of those laws
link |
01:26:23.440
to figure out when a body moves in certain curves and is forced to move in those curves
link |
01:26:30.320
by forces directed to certain fixed points, what is the nature of the mathematical formula
link |
01:26:37.680
for those forces? That's all that book one is about. And it contains not the kind of version
link |
01:26:44.240
of the calculus that uses algebra of the sort that I was trying to explain before,
link |
01:26:50.080
but is done in terms of ratios between geometric line segments when one of the line segments goes
link |
01:27:00.960
very, very small. It's called the kind of limiting procedure, which is calculus, but it's a geometrically
link |
01:27:08.320
structured, although it's clearly got algebraic elements in it as well. And that makes the
link |
01:27:14.960
Principia's mathematical structure rather hard for people who aren't studying it today to
link |
01:27:22.880
go back to. Book two contains his work on what we now call hydrostatics and a little bit about
link |
01:27:34.080
hydrodynamics, a fuller development of the concept of pressure, which is a complicated concept.
link |
01:27:42.880
And book three applies what he did in book one to the solar system. And it is successful
link |
01:27:51.680
partially because the only way that you can exactly solve, the only types of problems you
link |
01:27:59.920
can exactly solve in terms of the interactions of two particles governed by gravitational force
link |
01:28:08.320
between them is for only two bodies. If there's more than two, let's say it's A, B, and C,
link |
01:28:15.440
A acts on B, B acts on C, C acts on A, you cannot solve it exactly. You have to develop techniques.
link |
01:28:24.160
The fullest sets of techniques are really only developed about 30 or 40 years after Newton's
link |
01:28:29.840
death by French mathematicians like Laplace. Newton tried to apply his structure to the
link |
01:28:40.080
sun, earth, moon, because the moon's motion is very complicated. The moon, for instance,
link |
01:28:47.200
exactly repeats its observable position among the stars only every 19 years.
link |
01:28:53.520
That is, if you look up where the moon is among the stars at certain times and it changes,
link |
01:28:59.280
it's complicated. That's, by the way, that was discovered by the Babylonians.
link |
01:29:06.800
That fact, the 19 years.
link |
01:29:08.320
Thousands of years ago, yes.
link |
01:29:09.840
And then you have to load that little piece of data and how do you make sense of it? I mean,
link |
01:29:13.680
that is data and you have to fit it.
link |
01:29:15.280
And it's complicated. So Newton actually kind of reverse engineered a technique that had been
link |
01:29:21.920
developed by a man named Horrocks, using certain laws of Kepler's to try and get around this thing.
link |
01:29:28.480
And Newton then sort of, my understanding, I've never studied this, has reversed,
link |
01:29:33.600
sort of reversed it and fit it together with his force calculations by way of an approximation.
link |
01:29:40.480
And was able to construct a model to make some predictions?
link |
01:29:46.080
It fit things backwards pretty well.
link |
01:29:49.680
Okay. Where does data fit into this? We kind of earlier in the discussion
link |
01:29:57.360
mentioned data as part of the scientific method. How important was data to Newton?
link |
01:30:04.560
Okay.
link |
01:30:05.440
So like you mentioned Prism and playing with it and looking at stuff and then coming up with
link |
01:30:11.120
calculations and so on. Where does data fit into any of his ideas?
link |
01:30:14.720
All right. Well, let me say two things first. One, we rarely use the phrase scientific method
link |
01:30:20.800
anymore because there is no one easily describable such method. I mean, humans have been
link |
01:30:28.880
playing around with the world and learning how to repetitively do things and make things happen
link |
01:30:34.160
ever since, you know, humans became humans.
link |
01:30:37.200
Do you have a preferred definition of the scientific method?
link |
01:30:41.280
Do you have a preferred definition of the scientific method? What are the various?
link |
01:30:46.480
No, I don't. I prefer to talk about
link |
01:30:52.880
the considered manipulation of artificial structures to produce results that can be
link |
01:31:02.160
worked together with schemes to construct other devices and make
link |
01:31:08.160
predictions, if you will, about the way such things will work.
link |
01:31:11.360
So ultimately, it's about producing other devices. It's like leads you down a...
link |
01:31:16.080
I think so, principally. I mean, you may have data, if you will, like astronomical data
link |
01:31:23.280
obtained otherwise and so on, but yes. But number two here is this question of data. What is data
link |
01:31:30.640
in that sense? See, when we talk about data today, we have a kind of complex notion, which
link |
01:31:38.800
reverts to even issues of statistics and measurement procedures and so on. So let me put it to you this
link |
01:31:47.920
way. So let's say I had a ruler in front of me and it's marked off in little black marks separated
link |
01:31:55.760
by, let's say, distances called a millimeter. Okay. Now I make a mark on this piece of paper here.
link |
01:32:03.280
So I made a nice black mark, right? Nice black mark. And I ask you, I want you to measure that
link |
01:32:09.920
and tell me how long it is. You're going to take the ruler, you're going to put it next to it,
link |
01:32:17.200
and you're going to look, and it's not going to sit, even if you put one end in the middle,
link |
01:32:24.320
even if you put one end as close as you can on one black mark, the other end probably isn't going to
link |
01:32:29.680
be exactly on a black mark. Well, you'll say it's closer to this or that. You'll write down a number
link |
01:32:35.440
and I say, okay, take the ruler away a minute. I take this away, come back in five minutes,
link |
01:32:40.160
put the piece of paper down, do it again. You're going to probably come up with a different number
link |
01:32:45.520
and you're going to do that a lot of times. And then if I tell you, I want you to give me your
link |
01:32:50.000
best estimate of what the actual length of that thing is, what are you going to do?
link |
01:32:55.520
You're going to average all of these numbers. Why?
link |
01:33:04.480
Statistics.
link |
01:33:06.000
Well, yes, statistics. There's lots of ways of going around it,
link |
01:33:10.800
but the average is the best estimate on the basis of what's called the central limit theorem,
link |
01:33:16.720
a statistical theorem. We're talking about things that were not really developed until the 1750s,
link |
01:33:23.840
60s and 70s. Newton died in 1727.
link |
01:33:26.880
The intuition perhaps was there.
link |
01:33:28.800
Not really. I'll tell you what people did, including Newton, although Newton is
link |
01:33:33.440
partially the one exception. We talked a while ago about this guy, Christian Huygens.
link |
01:33:39.040
He measured lots of things and he was a good mechanic himself. He and his brother ground
link |
01:33:45.680
lenses. Huygens, I told you, developed the first pendulum mechanism, pendulum driven clock with a
link |
01:33:51.680
mechanism and so on. Also a spring watch where he got into a controversy with Hooke over that,
link |
01:33:58.080
by the way.
link |
01:34:00.240
What's with these mechanics and the controversy?
link |
01:34:04.800
Well, we also have Huygens's notes. They're preserved at Leiden University in Holland,
link |
01:34:12.960
he's Dutch, for his work in optics, which was extensive. We don't have time to go into that,
link |
01:34:18.960
except the following. A number of years ago, I went through those things because
link |
01:34:23.920
in this optical theory that he had, there are four numbers that you've got to be able to get
link |
01:34:30.480
good numbers on to be able to predict other things. What would we do today? What in fact
link |
01:34:37.360
was done at the end of the 18th century when somebody went back to this? I told you to do
link |
01:34:42.480
with the ruler. You make a lot of measurements and average results. We have Huygens's notes.
link |
01:34:48.240
He did make a lot of measurements, one after the other, after the other. But when he came to use
link |
01:34:56.240
the numbers for calculations, and indeed when he published things at the end of his life,
link |
01:35:03.120
he gives you one number and it's not the average of any of them. It's just one of them. Which one
link |
01:35:09.360
was it? The one that he thought he got so good at working by practice that he put down the one he
link |
01:35:20.080
was most confident in. That was the general procedure at the time. You wouldn't publish
link |
01:35:26.880
a paper in which you wrote down six numbers and said, well, I measured this six times.
link |
01:35:32.320
Let me put them together. None of them is really, they would have said, the right number,
link |
01:35:37.360
but I'll put them together and give you a good number. No, you would have been thought of that,
link |
01:35:42.240
you know, you don't know what you're doing. Yeah. By the way, there's just an inkling of value to
link |
01:35:49.440
that approach. Just an inkling. We sometimes use statistics as like a thing that like, oh,
link |
01:35:56.800
that solves all the problems. We'll just do a lot of it and we'll take the average or whatever it
link |
01:36:01.760
is. As many excellent books on mathematics have highlighted the flaws in our approach to certain
link |
01:36:08.640
sciences that rely heavily on statistics. Okay. Let me ask you again for a friend about this
link |
01:36:16.800
alchemy thing. You know, it'd be nice to create gold, but it also seems to come into play quite
link |
01:36:24.160
a bit throughout the history of science, perhaps in positive ways in terms of its impact. Can you
link |
01:36:30.320
say something to the history of alchemy? A little bit. Sure. It used to be thought two things. One,
link |
01:36:40.480
that alchemy, which dates certainly back to the Islamic period in Islam, you're talking, you know,
link |
01:36:49.040
11th, 12th, 13th centuries among Islamic natural philosophers and experimenters.
link |
01:36:54.720
But it used to be thought that alchemy, which picked up strikingly in the 16th century, 1500s
link |
01:37:03.360
and thereabouts, was a sort of mystical procedure involving all sorts of strange notions and so on.
link |
01:37:12.080
And that's not entirely untrue, but it is substantially untrue in that alchemists were
link |
01:37:20.240
engaged in what was known as chrysopoeia, that is looking for ways to transform invaluable materials
link |
01:37:32.480
into valuable ones. But in the process of doing so or attempting to do so, they learned how to
link |
01:37:42.000
create complex amalgams of various kinds. They used very elaborate apparatus, glass
link |
01:37:49.920
alembics in which they would use heat to produce chemical decompositions. They would write down and
link |
01:37:57.360
observe these compositions. And many of the so called really strange looking alchemical formulas
link |
01:38:03.840
and statements where they'll say something like, I can't produce it, but it'll be the soul of
link |
01:38:09.360
Mars will combine with this, et cetera, et cetera. These, it has been shown, are almost all actual
link |
01:38:18.720
formulas for how to engage in the production of complex amalgams and what to do. And by the time
link |
01:38:26.960
of Newton, Newton was reading the works of a fellow by the name of Starkey, who actually came
link |
01:38:34.960
from Harvard shortly before, in which things had progressed, if you will, to the point where
link |
01:38:45.360
the procedure turns into what historians call chrysopoeia, which basically runs into the notion
link |
01:38:52.640
of thinking that these things are made out of particles. This is the mechanical philosophy.
link |
01:39:00.000
This is the mechanical philosophy. Can we engage in processes, chemical processes to rearrange these
link |
01:39:06.800
things, which is not so stupid after all. I mean, we do it, except we happen to do it in reactors,
link |
01:39:12.800
not in chemical processes, unless of course it had happened that cold fusion had worked,
link |
01:39:18.560
which it didn't. Not yet. Well, right. So that's the way they're thinking about these things.
link |
01:39:26.240
There's a kind of mix. And Newton engages extensively in those sorts of manipulations.
link |
01:39:32.320
In fact, more in that than almost anything else, except for his optical investigations. If you look
link |
01:39:41.360
through the latter parts of the 1670s, the last five, six, seven years or so of that,
link |
01:39:47.440
there's more on that than there is on anything else. He's not working on mechanics. He's pretty
link |
01:39:53.280
much gone pretty far in optics. He'll turn back to optics later on. So optics and alchemy.
link |
01:40:00.400
So what you're saying is Isaac Newton liked shiny things. Well, actually, if you go online and look
link |
01:40:07.360
at what Bill Newman, the professor at Indiana, at Bloomington, Indiana has produced, you'll find
link |
01:40:13.680
the very shiny thing called the star regulus, which Newton describes as having produced according to
link |
01:40:19.760
a particular way, which Newman figured out and was able to do it. And it's very shiny.
link |
01:40:25.920
There you go. Proves the theorem. Can I ask you about God, religion and its role in Newton's life?
link |
01:40:34.720
Was there helpful, constructive or destructive influences of religion in his work and in his life?
link |
01:40:47.120
Well, there you begin to touch on a complex question. The role that God played would be an
link |
01:40:55.520
interesting question to answer should one go and be able to speak with this invisible character
link |
01:41:00.400
who doesn't exist. But putting that aside for the moment. Yeah, we don't like to talk about others
link |
01:41:05.200
while they're not here. So, right. Newton is a deeply religious man, not unusually so,
link |
01:41:12.560
of course, for the time. And clearly, his upbringing and perhaps his early experiences
link |
01:41:24.960
have exacerbated that in a number of ways that he takes a lot of things personally. And he finds
link |
01:41:32.080
perhaps solace in thinking about a sort of governing, abstract, rulemaking, exacting deity.
link |
01:41:45.600
I think there is little question that his conviction that you can figure things out has
link |
01:41:56.160
a fair bit to do with his profound belief that this rulemaker doesn't do things arbitrarily.
link |
01:42:06.720
Newton does not think that miracles have happened since maybe the time of Christ, if then,
link |
01:42:14.080
and not in the same way. He was, for instance, an anti Trinitarian. He did not hold that Christ
link |
01:42:20.000
had a divine being, but was rather endowed with certain powers by the rulemaker and whatnot.
link |
01:42:28.240
And he did not think that some of the tales of the Old Testament with various miracles and so on
link |
01:42:38.720
occurred in anything like that way. Some may have, some may not have. Like everybody else,
link |
01:42:44.720
of course, he did think that creation had happened about 6,000 years ago. Wait, really? Oh, yeah,
link |
01:42:51.200
sure. Well, biblical chronology can give you a little bit about that. It's a little controversial,
link |
01:42:56.640
but sure. Interesting. Wow. The deity created the universe 6,000 years ago. And that didn't
link |
01:43:06.320
interfere with his playing around with the sun and the moon? No, because he's figuring out,
link |
01:43:12.480
he's watching the brilliant construction that this perfect entity did 6,000 years ago.
link |
01:43:21.600
Yeah, has produced. Plus or minus a few years. Well, if you go with Bishop Boster, it's 4004 BCE.
link |
01:43:30.080
Want to be precise about it. We always, and this is a serious program, we always want to be precise.
link |
01:43:36.080
Okay. Let me ask another ridiculous question. If Newton were to travel forward in time
link |
01:43:45.440
and visit with Einstein and have a discussion about space time and general relativity,
link |
01:43:54.880
that conception of time and that conception of gravity, what do you think that discussion will go
link |
01:43:59.600
like? Put that way, I think Newton would sit there in shock and say, I have no idea what you're
link |
01:44:07.120
talking about. If on the other hand, there's a time machine, you go back and bring a somewhat
link |
01:44:13.440
younger Newton, not a man my age, say. I mean, he lived a long time into his mid eighties,
link |
01:44:22.320
but take him when he's in his forties, let's say, bring him forward and don't immediately
link |
01:44:27.280
introduce him to Einstein. Let's take him for a ride on a railroad. Let him experience the
link |
01:44:33.760
railroad. Oh, that's right. Take him around and show him a sparking machine. He knows about sparks,
link |
01:44:45.920
sending off sparks. Show him wires, have him touch the wires and get a little shock.
link |
01:44:52.320
Show him a clicking telegraph machine of the kind. Then let him hear the clicks in a telephone
link |
01:45:01.600
receiver and so on. Do that for a couple of months. Let him get accustomed to things.
link |
01:45:08.480
Then take him into, not Einstein yet, let's say we're taking him into the 1890s. Einstein is
link |
01:45:14.880
young man then. We take him into some of the laboratories. We show him some of the equipment,
link |
01:45:21.040
the devices, not the most elaborate ones. We show him certain things. We educate him
link |
01:45:26.880
bit by bit. On optics, maybe focus on that. Certainly on optics. You begin to show him
link |
01:45:32.960
things. He's a brilliant human being. I think bit by bit, he would begin to see what's going on.
link |
01:45:42.480
But if you just dumped him in front of Einstein, he'd sit there, his eyes would glaze over.
link |
01:45:46.640
I mean, I guess it's almost a question of how big of a leap, how many leaps have been taken
link |
01:45:57.760
in science that go from Newton to Einstein. We sometimes in a compressed version of history
link |
01:46:02.960
think that not much. Oh, that's totally wrong. A lot. Huge amounts in multifarious ways
link |
01:46:13.200
involving fundamental conceptions, mathematical structures, the evolution of novel experimentation
link |
01:46:19.360
and devices, the organization. It's not everything. Everything. I mean, to a point where I wonder
link |
01:46:25.600
even if Newton was like, you said 40, but even like 30. So he's very, like if you would be able
link |
01:46:35.120
to catch up with the conception of everything. I wonder as a scientist, how much you load in from
link |
01:46:42.080
age five about this world in order to be able to conceive of the world of ideas that push that
link |
01:46:50.400
science forward. I mean, you mentioned the railroad and all those kinds of things. That might be
link |
01:46:56.480
fundamental to our ability to invent even when it doesn't directly obviously seem relevant.
link |
01:47:02.000
Well, yes. I mean, the railroad, the steam engine, the Watt engine, et cetera. I mean,
link |
01:47:13.840
that was really the Watt engine was developed pretty... Although Watt knew Joseph Black,
link |
01:47:19.440
a chemist scientist and so on, did stuff on heat, was developed pretty much independently of
link |
01:47:25.200
the developing thoughts about heat at the time. But what it's not independent of is the evolution
link |
01:47:36.560
of practice in the manufacture and construction of devices which can do things in extraordinarily
link |
01:47:45.200
novel ways and the premium being gradually placed on calculating how you can make them more
link |
01:47:51.600
efficient. That is of a piece with a way of thinking about the world in which you're controlling
link |
01:48:00.320
things and working it. It's something that humans have been doing for a long time, but in this more
link |
01:48:07.040
concerted and structured way, I think you really don't find it in the fullest sense until well into
link |
01:48:18.160
the 1500s and really not fully until the 17th century later on. So Newton had this year of
link |
01:48:28.320
miracles. I wonder if I could ask you briefly about Einstein and his year of miracles. I've
link |
01:48:34.560
been reading, re reading, revisiting the brilliance of the papers that Einstein published in the year
link |
01:48:42.800
1905, one of which won him the Nobel prize, the photoelectric effect, but also Brownian motion,
link |
01:48:49.280
special theory of relativity, and of course the old E equals MC squared.
link |
01:49:00.480
Does that make sense to you that these two figures had such productive years
link |
01:49:05.520
that there's this moment of genius? Maybe, maybe if we zoom out, I mean, I, my work is very much
link |
01:49:12.960
in artificial intelligence, sort of wondering about the nature of intelligence. Like how did we,
link |
01:49:20.000
how did evolution on earth produce genius that could come up with so much in so little time?
link |
01:49:28.400
To me, that gives me hope that one person can change the world in such a small amount of time.
link |
01:49:35.040
Well, of course there are precedents for, in both Newton's and Einstein's cases for elements of
link |
01:49:44.720
what we're finding there. It's, you know, and so on. Well, I have no idea. You know,
link |
01:49:50.000
I'm sure you must've read, it was a kind of a famous story that after Einstein died,
link |
01:49:54.880
he donated his brain and they sliced it up to see if they could find something unusual there,
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01:50:00.240
nothing unusual visibly in there. So I have, clearly there are people who for various reasons,
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maybe both intrinsic and extrinsic in the sense of experience and so on, are capable of coming
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up with these extraordinary results. Many years ago, when I was a student, a friend of mine came
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in and said, did you read about, did you read this? I forget what, anyway, there was a story
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in the paper. It was about, I think it was a young woman who was, she couldn't speak and she was
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somewhere on the autism spectrum. She could not read other people's affect in any ways, but she
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could sit down at a piano and having heard it once and then run variations on the most complex
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pianistic works of Chopin and others, right? Now how?
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Some aspect of our mind is able to tune in in some aspect of reality and become a master of it.
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And every once in a while, that means coming up with breakthrough ideas in physics.
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Yep. How the heck does that happen? Who knows? Jed, I'd like to say thank you so much for spending
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your valuable time with me today. It was a really fascinating conversation. I've learned so much
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about Isaac Newton, who's one of the most fascinating figures in human history. So
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thank you so much for talking to me. My pleasure. I enjoyed it very much.
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Thanks for listening to this conversation with Jed Buchwald. To support this podcast,
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01:51:51.360
please check out our sponsors in the description. And now let me leave you with some words from
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Thomas Kuhn, a philosopher of science. The answers you get depend on the questions you ask.
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Thank you for listening, and hope to see you next time.