Sounds like a profound book. What do you think is mean't by the author stating:

6) A person’s light cone might provide the boundary to turn nothing into 
something.









-----Original Message-----
From: John Clark <[email protected]>
To: everything-list <[email protected]>
Sent: Sat, Apr 23, 2016 5:54 pm
Subject: Trespassing On Einstein’s Lawn




I just finished ​
Amanda Gefter’s new book, Trespassing On Einstein’s Lawn, 
​​
physicist Sean Carroll 
​called it​
 “The most charming book ever written about the fundamental nature of reality” 
and I think he’s right. Gefter is obsessed with answering the question “why is 
there
​ something rather than nothing?" ; needless to say she hasn't found a 
definitive answer but I have found 46 points in the book that may have some 
relevance to the question:   ​

1) A good definition of "nothing" is infinite unbounded homogeneity
​.​
 

2)  A “thing” is defined by it’s boundaries; a blank paper is not a picture 
​until
 a line is drawn
​ on it​
. 

3) Godel’s Theorem is a good thing because it provides a boundary and without a 
boundary there is no
​ ​
thing. 

4) The boundary of a boundary is zero so everything you need to know about the 
interior 
​of a thing ​
is on the boundary. 

5) Something and nothing are not opposites just different ways of looking at 
the same thing.

6) A person’s light cone might provide the boundary to turn nothing into 
something.

7) The Big Bang happened everywhere.

8) Bits are the fundamental building blocks of reality.


​9​
) Paradoxes always crop up when you try to describe physics from a God’s eye 
view
​,​
 so such a view can not exist.


​10​
) Spacetime curvature does not require a God’s eye view, it can be measured 
from within. 

11) For electromagnetism you have to expend energy to make a large electrical 
charge but with gravity it’s the 
​​o
pposite, it wants to make things
​ 
lumpy
​ 
so
​ 
unlike electromagnetism gravity 
​has​
 a negative contribution to total energy in the universe.


​12​
) The universe has zero energy.


​13​
) But zero is too precise a number for 
​Quantum M
echanics because 
​"​
nothing
​"​
 is unstable. 


​14​
) The vacuum’s virtual field gives quarks 95% of their mass, the Higgs field 
does the rest.


​16​
) Quantum particles don’t have positions in spacetime only probabilities. 


​17​
) Something is ultimately real only if it is invariant.


​18​
) Progress in physics comes from discovering what was thought to be real is 
actually observer dependent.

19) A inertial observer 
​in free fall sees 
a straight line through space time.


​20​
) Others see the person accelerating in a gravitational field tracing out more 
and more space in less time
​. and thus​
 
producing​
 a curved world line.


​21​
) You can turn a curve into a straight line by stretching the paper, gravity 
stretches spacetime.


​22​
) 
​A​
 curved world line in flat spacetime is exactly the same as a straight world 
line in curved spacetime.


​23​
) A gauge force fixes the mismatch between observers, gravity is a gauge force 
as are all the fundamental forces in physics.


​24​
) The local curvature of spacetime cancels out energy and momentum
​,​
 and that’s why mass curves spacetime.


​25​
) In General 
​R​
elativity 
​m​
ass (and 
​because E=MC^2​
 energy
​ too​
) is only defined within reference frames, it is observer dependent.


​26​
) Entropy is a measure of hidden information
​,​
 and a event horizon can hide information.


​27​
) Entropy is not conserved.


​28​
) The more symmetric something is the less information it contains.


​29​
) The Entropy of nothing is zero.


​30​
) The very early universe was smooth and 
​symmetrical​
 and thus had low Entropy.


​31​
) Gravity wants to make the universe lumpy and thus increase it’s Entropy.


​32​
) The maximum number of bits of information inside a sphere is equal to one 
fourth the area of the surface in Planck Areas.


​33​
) 
​A​
 Black Hole 
​contains as much information as any volume can, ​although its
 amount is proportional to 
​the Black Hole's​
 surface not its volume.


​34​
)
​ ​
Hawking radiation is observer dependent. 


​35)​
 A unmeasured bit of quantum information can not be perfectly copied, if you 
could then you could outsmart the uncertainty principle.


​36​
) Quantum Mechanics says information can’t be destroyed but 
​General Relativity says it can be, the confrontation comes to a head in ​
Black Holes.


​37​
) A outside observer would say information never crosses the Event Horizon 
​of a Black hole ​
but stays on the surface.


​38​
) A observer falling into the Black Hole would say information 
​does ​
cross the Event Horizon without incident and nothing unusual happens until the 
Singularity
​ is reached​
.


​39​
) A black hole the mass of our sun,  would take about 10^67 years to evaporate 
by Hawking Radiation. 


​40​
) Hawking Radiation contains information on what went into a Black Hole.


​41​
) The time needed to decode Hawking Radiation increases exponentially even with 
a Quantum Computer.


​42​
) It would take not 10^67 but 10^10^67 years to compute what went into the 
Black Hole from the Hawking Radiation that came out of it, and the Black Hole 
would be long gone by then. 


​43​
) The location of information is observer dependent, so nobody can see the same 
quantum bit at 2 different locations at the same time because 
​n​
o observer can see both inside and outside a Black Hole horizon at the same 
time.

4
​4​
) If Quantum Mechanics and General Relativity don’t contradict each other
​ 
that must mean that if you haven’t 
​finished the computation 
then 
​the information is​
 not there yet.


​45)​
The only thing that's invariant is nothing


​46) ​
Reality is observer dependent, and the weirdness in physics doesn’t come from 
non-locality but 
​from ​
non-reality.



​ John K Clark​



 




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