Episode #472 from 1:07:09

Theory of everything

Does your gut say that there is a theory of everything, so this is even possible to unify, to find this language that unifies general relativity and quantum mechanics? I believe so. The history of physics has been out of unification much like mathematics over the years. [inaudible 01:07:26] magnetism was separate theories and then Maxwell unified them. Newton unified the motions of heavens for the motions of objects on the Earth and so forth. So it should happen. It's just that, again, to go back to this model of the observations and theory, part of our problem is that physics is a victim of it's own success. That our two big theories of physics, general relativity and quantum mechanics are so good now is that together they cover 99.9% of all the observations we can make. And you have to either go to extremely insane particle accelerations or the early universe or things that are really hard to measure in order to get any deviation from either of these two theories to the point where you can actually figure out how to combine together. But I have faith that we've been doing this for centuries and we've made progress before. There's no reason why we should stop.

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Does your gut say that there is a theory of everything, so this is even possible to unify, to find this language that unifies general relativity and quantum mechanics? I believe so. The history of physics has been out of unification much like mathematics over the years. [inaudible 01:07:26] magnetism was separate theories and then Maxwell unified them. Newton unified the motions of heavens for the motions of objects on the Earth and so forth. So it should happen. It's just that, again, to go back to this model of the observations and theory, part of our problem is that physics is a victim of it's own success. That our two big theories of physics, general relativity and quantum mechanics are so good now is that together they cover 99.9% of all the observations we can make. And you have to either go to extremely insane particle accelerations or the early universe or things that are really hard to measure in order to get any deviation from either of these two theories to the point where you can actually figure out how to combine together. But I have faith that we've been doing this for centuries and we've made progress before. There's no reason why we should stop.

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Theory of everything chapter timestamp | Terence Tao: Hardest Problems in Mathematics, Physics & the Future of AI | EpisodeIndex