Eric Weinstein: The String Theory Wars

The fight for the soul and and future of physics

String Theory has been the dominant candidate for a ‘theory of everything’ for decades. But Eric Weinstein thinks its dominance is unjustified and has resulted in a culture that has stifled critique, alternative views, and ultimately has damaged theoretical physics at a catastrophic level. In this exclusive interview, Weinstein defends String Theory against some of its critics, but ultimately argues the need for a fundamental cultural shift to save the vitality of the field from certain death.

 

These days almost all of theoretical physics is conducted by professional academics working in universities. Leaving aside the droves of amateurs bombarding high profile physicists with their pet theories that supposedly prove Einstein wrong or solve the measurement problem of quantum mechanics once and for all, there are very few, but notable exceptions. Eric Weinstein is perhaps the most famous among them.  

There is something alluring about the image of the lone genius, hacking away at some of the hardest theoretical physics problems, aiming to uncover the secret language of the universe armed with just pen, paper, and their intellect. We owe this image of the physics maverick to Albert Einstein who singlehandedly triggered one of the two major revolutions in physics while working as a patent clerk. Weinstein’s day job has been a bit more glamorous than that, being the managing director of Thiel Capital for a number of years, though these days he is working with Thiel in a different capacity and describes himself as an entertainer, being the host of a podcast, The Portal.

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What if, Weinstein continues, the very idea of spacetime is doomed? ‘Spacetime’ is just a model, and one that might be deeply problematic.

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I reached out to Weinstein because I wanted to talk to him about String Theory. A recent exchange he had with Brian Greene, one of the most influential string theorists alive today, has been ringing in the back of my mind and I wanted to find out more about Weinstein’s views on the matter. In his exchange with Greene, he accused string theory, or rather string theory culture, as being the main obstacle for the development of theoretical physics in the past 50 years or so. Weinstein repeated some of these claims in a recent podcast with Brian Keating and Dan Greene. So why is it that despite some of the most distinguished theoretical physicists seeing String Theory as the most promising candidate for a so-called theory of everything, does Weinstein hold it responsible for the discipline’s stagnation?

“Before we attempt a theory of everything, we need to understand our two fundamental models for physical reality”, Weinstein begins. You see, ever since Einstein, physicists have been assuming that a theory of everything is the next logical step for physics, when in fact we probably still don’t fully understand the two theories we are trying to merge: Quantum Field Theory and General Relativity.

“People assume the standard model is fine as it is. But some of the things blocking us [merging gravity with the standard model] are things we think we know, but are in fact wrong and misleading.” So, in a way, jumping ahead to a theory of everything is the wrong approach. We first need to untangle the various hidden assumptions that we have sneaked in, both in General Relativity as well as Quantum Mechanics, that have become blind spots propagated from one generation of physicists to another. And while physicists often recognise that this might be the case, Weinstein isn’t sure they appreciate just how big of a problem it is, and how difficult it will be to unto. “Once our minds are grooved in certain ways, it’s very hard to have any new thoughts.”

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“I have nothing against String Theory per se, as String Theory doesn’t hurt anyone. But I am absolutely committed to the idea that if we do not purge String Theory culture and Quantum Gravity culture, and get back to collegiality, self-critique, that this field will die.”

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 Finding a way of merging our understanding of all the different forces of nature into one theory isn’t exactly motivated by mundane practical concerns, Weinstein admits, as there aren’t many daily problems of real life for which we appear to need a theory of everything.The goal is to find a way to make General Relativity compatible with Quantum Theory. But, again Weinstein insists, that might happen in a way that most physicists don’t expect. What theoretical physicists have been focussing on is quantizing gravity. Their guiding intuition is that we need to find a way for quantum mechanics to work not just on the small scale, but on the large scale, on objects with enough mass to put a dent into spacetime. At the moment, Einstein’s field equations don’t seem to allow for that. But what if, Weinstein continues, the very idea of spacetime is doomed, as theoretical physicist Nima Arkani-Hamed suggests? ‘Spacetime’ is just a model, and one that might be deeply problematic. There are plenty of different structures, according to Weinstein, that could replace spacetime and from which it could be recovered. If that is the case, gravity might not need to be quantized in the first place.

We’re back at the idea that we still don’t understand General Relativity well enough, or that we haven’t yet sufficiently interrogated one of its key concepts, in this case spacetime. This reminds me of Sabine Hossenfelder’s claim that we still don’t understand one of the key issues of quantum mechanics: the measurement problem.

So why, instead of interrogating the fundamentals of Quantum Mechanics and Relativity, have theoretical physicists been focussing on attempts to merge the two in the form of String Theory? This is where Weinstein and his critique about the state of physics comes alive. The project of Quantum Gravity, of which String theory is one version, became toxic in the mid 1980s, according to Weinstein, silencing anyone who dared challenge the direction of travel, and suppressing any alternative proposal for a way forward. Theorists who expressed any dissent from the orthodoxy of Quantum Gravity “simply didn’t get grants and jobs”, Weinstein argues, “their careers ended”. Once the Quantum Gravity community took hold and began to weaponize the standards for new ideas, the bar for publishing anything in the foundations of physics that that challenged that project became prohibitively high, while at the same time the standards for publishing anything that was part of the Quantum Gravity project were lowered. This had nothing to do with the fact that the people working on Quantum Gravity, and String Theory in particular, weren’t capable. In fact, Weinstein thinks the physicists that ended up going into String Theory were generally the most intellectually able. But they became the status quo, the establishment, and as with every establishment, it became tempting to solidify its hold on power by pushing forward double standards for itself and its competitors.

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"Science is not a hypothesis that you then go out into the world to test. That’s what we tell religious fundamentalists, so they don’t invade our subject."

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This has been going on for several decades now, according to Weinstein, and the theoretical physics community is suffering from something akin to the sunk-cost fallacy. “Too many PhDs, conferences, dollars, jobs later, we are effectively looking at something that’s too big to fail.”

When I press Weinstein on whether his critique of String Theory goes beyond this sociological account of how one project - a project that despite all the talent it attracted, has essentially stalled - came to dominate the field at the expense of all other projects, I get less of a response than I was expecting: “I have nothing against String Theory per se, as String Theory doesn’t hurt anyone. But I am absolutely committed to the idea that if we do not purge String Theory culture and Quantum Gravity culture, and get back to collegiality, self-critique, that this field will die.”

Weinstein, for example, has little time for one of the standard objections against String Theory: that it’s unfalsifiable, and hence it’s not really science. “Science is not a hypothesis that you then go out into the world to test. That’s what we tell religious fundamentalists, so they don’t invade our subject. We have oversimplified the scientific method into a fairy tale we tell slow children because we have bad actors, if we didn’t, then we could say what science really is.” The problem, according to Weinstein, is that the scientific community itself has internalised some of these “fairy tales” and uses them to discredit their opponents.

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"Science requires the middle finger. In the absence of a middle finger, it doesn’t work. When you impoverish people, you dismantle the scientific method.”

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What then I asked, is science, given that, none of the definitions philosophers of science have come up with over the years seem to fit the bill.  “Everything that results in reliable knowledge is science” retorted Weinstein. “Science includes the hypothetico-deductive model, but it also includes Kary Mullis getting stoned out of his mind and coming up with the polymerase chain reaction, or Kekulé dreaming of snakes swallowing their own tail, and coming to understand the structure of benzenes.”

But for Weinstein, even if science is not as neatly structured in its methodology as we might like to think, it does require a certain amount of freedom, financial freedom in particular, in order to function properly. “Science requires the middle finger. In the absence of a middle finger, it doesn’t work. When you impoverish people, you dismantle the scientific method.” What Weinstein is referring to will be all too familiar to junior academics, not only in theoretical physics, but across all academia: job insecurity, and financial precarity. When your career depends on pleasing more powerful and established academics, then the questioning, doubting, and interrogating suffers – science suffers.

So what’s the way forward? Weinstein thinks two things need to happen. First, it would help “if some of the people most responsible for the popularity of String Theory behaved like scientists rather than bullies and stepped up to the plate and addressed the need to get rid of this culture or were to at least enter serious debates in open forums about the utter 70 year fiasco of Quantum gravity, the spell would be broken” “I can’t even begin to say how bad the culture is. It’s destructive of healthy inquiry, and it has always been deliberately  bullying and destructive of healthy inquiry, as the only way it survives is that people are afraid to question the lack of successes or progress in the field, despite all the talent and resources that have gone into it.”

Weinstein hopes that this clearing of the air shouldn’t be hard for people at the end of their careers, with no need for any further recognition and accolades. When I ask Weinstein who he has in mind, two names come up: Edward Witted and David Gross. Weinstein describes Witten “as the Michael Jordan of theoretical physics, if only Michael Jordan was a better basketball player”, and credits him for having directed everyone towards String Theory, after he himself became convinced that was the way forward. David Gross, on the other hand, was one of the only String Theorists who brought with him a Nobel-prize-winning contact with experiment from a previous era, and so lent his support to String Theory as ‘real physics’

The other thing Weinstein recommends is securing enough resources for the future generation of theoretical physicists. “If you wanted to see how the oldest two generations of theoretical physicists welcomed the young, I highly recommend Goya’s painting of Cronos eating his children.” Despite his thorough critique of the String Theory and Quantum Gravity community, Weinstein’s last words on the matter is that we need to give more money, not less. The financial insecurity that people feel about their future is part of what fuels the bad behaviour, according to Weinstein.

“If people don’t have the ability to speak back to their advisors, to talk back against their institutions, the problem will continue. It’s time to for theoretical physicist to stop worrying where their next pay cheque will come from in a world of prosperity built on the back of 19th-20th century physics discoveries, or to be worried they will be defamed as a crank or a crackpot or charlatan by people who have failed at their jobs for 50 years and projecting their fears of inadequacy, self-hatred and wasted lives. If you want to get science you can rely on, you have to get rid of science you can control. Please give my competitors and detractors more money so they can go back to being colleagues rather than trolls with PhDs.”

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Bud Rapanault 19 February 2023

Well it would be hard to overstate the extreme and blatant
hypocrisy of this remark:

“Science is not a hypothesis that you then go out into the world to test. That’s what we tell religious fundamentalists, so they don’t invade our subject. We have oversimplified the scientific method into a fairy tale we tell slow children because we have bad actors, if we didn’t, then we could say what science really is.” The problem, according to Weinstein, is that the scientific community itself has internalised some of these “fairy tales” and uses them to discredit their opponents."

Talk about brazen! That's a Master Class in Class Hypocrisy! A separate set of rules one for the "wise ones" and one for the "fools". Sickening - and I agree with many of his criticisms otherwise.

That attitude is at the heart of the reason that the two standard model's are physically inane mathematical monstrosities. Theoretical physics these days does not play by the rules of science and it's a mess.

Xinhang Shen 18 February 2023

"String Theory has been considered the most promising candidate for a so-called theory of everything for decades. It purports to have achieved what has been the holy grail for physics ever since Einstein: the merging of Quantum Filed Theory (our best theory about the very small) with General Relativity (our best theory about the very large)."

Then, it is just a waste of effort because Einstein's relativity is fatally wrong and even can be disproved by a few sentences as shown below:

Einstein uses Lorentz Transformation to have redefined the space and time. The newly defined time is no longer the physical time measured with physical clocks. According to Lorentz Transformation, the time of the moving frame t' is shorter than the time of the stationary frame t:

t' = t/gamma < t

which is so called "time dilation", from which Einstein simply concludes that the frequency of the moving clock becomes lower than that of the stationary clock without any reasoning. He even thinks that the traveling twin would be younger than the twin stayed on the earth when they reunited on the earth after the trip. Relativists even claim that numerous experiments "have proved" relativistic time dilation.

But the period of the moving clock p' as an interval of the time of the moving frame should also be shorter than the period of the stationary clock p:

p' = p/gamma < p

Thus, the frequency of the moving clock f' should become faster than the frequency of the stationary clock f:

f' = 1/p' = gamma/p = gamma*f > f.

That means, the effect of "time dilation" makes the moving clock ticks faster than the stationary clock, directly denying Einstein's claim.

The shorter time of the moving frame and the higher frequency of the moving clock actually perfectly make the recorded number of periods N' a invariant of Lorentz Transformation:

N' = t'*f' = (t/gamma)*(gamma*f) = t*f = N

where N is the recorded number of periods on the stationary clock.

The Lorentz invariance of the recorded number of periods of a clock means clock time is still absolute, independent of the reference frame, and the time satisfying Lorentz Transformation is not clock time but an artificial time without physical meaning.

As clock time is still absolute, there is no such thing called spacetime and thus all spacetime based theories are wrong.

Michael DePietro 17 February 2023

It seems these days some very smart people have taken to saying some particularly asinine things and here is one of them...
“Science is not a hypothesis that you then go out into the world to test. That’s what we tell religious fundamentalists, so they don’t invade our subject. We have oversimplified the scientific method into a fairy tale we tell slow children because we have bad actors, if we didn’t, then we could say what science really is.” Followed by this... “Science includes the hypothetico-deductive model, but it also includes Kary Mullis getting stoned out of his mind and coming up with the polymerase chain reaction, or Kekulé dreaming of snakes swallowing their own tail, and coming to understand the structure of benzenes.” Weinstein that concludes with this bit of circular reasoning...
“Everything that results in reliable knowledge is science”... Say what... So how do we determine if a bit of "knowledge" is reliable? What is the criteria we use for reliable...? When the next future Mullis comes out of his LSD trip and says I have this brilliant idea... It might be a brilliant idea or it might be nonsense.. I have an idea.. why do we not ask the Mullis 2.0 to show us some empirical evidence that his or her idea is actually correct...Oh yeah.. that is sort of like science.. In fact it is what Mullis himself had to do....

It should be pretty self evident that while the origin of an idea might seem to be someone's drug induced haze or a dream the ultimate process of determining the validity of the theory depends on generating empirical evidence. There are a lot of drug induced hazes and goofy dreams and most of them do not lead to useful knowledge.. there are a lot of ways to generate ideas... The point is science is reliable to the extent it emphasizes empirical evidence. In fact even Weinstein's little history lesson about PCR is nonsense.. the ground work for PCR was laid in the early 1970s Kjelle Kleppe who with coworkers developed the initial techniques of replicating short DNA segments using primers.. Subsequently Mullis and Michael Scott working independently were awarded the Nobel prize for the development of PCR... In any case the development and proof of concept was done using standard collection of data and presenting it... In fact the development took years and had input of a number of people at the company that employed Mullis ( Cetus corporation)

There is some truth that at one time "science" meant any systematized body of knowledge and it is quite possible that there are systematized bodies of knowledge that can reach truth or attempt to do so.. typically they use elements of deduction and logical reasoning ( Mathematics or some branches of philosophy might be included here) But the modern usage of the word "Science" now means what entails confronting theories with experimental evidence.. Most well established scientific ideas have been proven essentially accurate ( even if there are things we do not fully understand) such as quantum mechanics or general relativity or the workings of DNA transcription, because of confirmation by empirical evidence, either experimental or observational. Other theories have been shown to be incorrect when data suggested the idea was false ( such as Dale's principle that a neuron would release only one neurotransmitter, which we now know is not always true.) or Something like Freudian psychoanalysis which while still popular in literary circles is no longer used much in actual psychiatric medicine since it has zero empirical evidence.

One thing I have noticed about the work of science popularizes is that it interviews some very smart people who are full of themselves.. Academia these days does not foster a lot of humility and it allows people to spew nonsense that does not survive much scrutiny.. If you are a surgeon and you spew nonsense.. your patients die, you get sued.. there are penalties.. My guess is if Weinstein makes a series of bad prediction managing Theil Capitol the Board at Theil would take notice of the financial losses and find a new leader... The problem with modern theoretical physics seems to be it has become infected with the problems in the rest of academia.. You can spew nonsense, it can be very sophisticated nonsense but it is going unchallenged because those who would challenge it are punished.. Not an expert in the relevant Math ( I did not get much farther than Calculus and statistics..) I can not opine on the merits of String theory etc.. but it appears that they have given up on the idea that is can be empirically verified or that this is even an appropriate criteria to determine if the theory is correct. IF that is the case than it is closer to Freudian Psychoanalysis than what we regard as useful science that taxpayer should shell out a lot of grant money to support.. And it likely will prove about as useful.