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by codethief
2199 days ago
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> For some context: the article only interviews quantum gravity researchers, so it has that particular slant. I would go even further: Natalie Wolchover only interviewed string theorists and quantum field theorists. They all assume that gravity in some way or another will just be yet another quantum field theory. There is not a single piece of evidence for this, though. Personally, I also don't think it is a particularly promising approach. As Hawking so eloquently put it: > But I believe [gravity] is distinctively different, because it shapes the arena in which it acts, unlike other fields which act in a fixed spacetime background. (Hawking in Hawking & Penrose: The Nature of Space and Time, chapter 1) |
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I didn't want to push that point too much. I am personally uncomfortable with the lack of emphasis on empirical evidence. However, that's not to say there can be fruitful results.
In terms of re-thinking geometric approaches, I quite liked (what I understood of) Nima Arkani-Hamed's suggestion for avoiding issues with localization. Similarly for Penrose's twistor theory.