Beyond the Dynamical Universe: Unifying Block Universe Physics and Time as Experienced

Author:   Michael Silberstein (Professor, Department of Philosophy, Elizabethtown College, USA) ,  W.M. Stuckey (Professor of physics, Elizabethtown College, USA) ,  Timothy McDevitt (Professor of mathematics, Elizabethtown College, USA)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198807087


Pages:   448
Publication Date:   15 February 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Beyond the Dynamical Universe: Unifying Block Universe Physics and Time as Experienced


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Author:   Michael Silberstein (Professor, Department of Philosophy, Elizabethtown College, USA) ,  W.M. Stuckey (Professor of physics, Elizabethtown College, USA) ,  Timothy McDevitt (Professor of mathematics, Elizabethtown College, USA)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.30cm , Height: 2.90cm , Length: 23.70cm
Weight:   0.874kg
ISBN:  

9780198807087


ISBN 10:   0198807082
Pages:   448
Publication Date:   15 February 2018
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Part I: Book Overview Overture for Ants 1: Introduction Part II: Adynamical Explanation: Physics 2: The Block Universe from Special Relativity 3: Resolving Puzzles, Problems and Paradoxes from General Relativity 4: Relational Blockworld and Quantum Mechanics 5: Relational Blockworld and Quantum Field Theory 6: Relational Blockworld Approach to Unification and Quantum Gravity Part III: Adynamical Explanation: Time as Experienced 7: Conscious Experience and the Block Universe 8: Relational Blockworld: Experience, Time and Space Reintegrated Coda for Ants References

Reviews

The book is an original and far-reaching attempt to bridge the gap between the physical image of time, presupposing a static view of a universe given in block, and our dynamical experience of passage, based on our perception of events coming into being in succession. To the extent that the essential task of philosophy is to achieve a unified view of the physical universe and of our place in it, this book is an absolute must for scientists and laypeople alike. You simply cannot put it down. * Mauro Dorato, University of Roma Tre, Italy * This book is innovative in form and content. The form - a physicist, a philosopher and a mathematician contributing parallel and interrelated threads on the same topicais an exemplary model of interdisciplinarity in the foundations of physics. The content - an adynamical, atemporal approach to solving the long-standing conceptual puzzles about quantum mechanics - is a radical departure from standard modes of physical explanation, and one that just might give us genuine insight into the nature of the quantum world. * Peter Lewis * A tour-de-force on physics and philosophy by a philosopher, a physicist, and a mathematician, Beyond the Dynamical Universe is a bold attempt to do away with the standard explanatory paradigm in physics and replace it with a form of blockworld adynamical explanation that might have been inspired by the heptapods in the movie Arrival. Itas a revolutionary proposal, with consequences for the nature of time and our perception of time, worked out in some detail in separate threads for the non-expert, the philosopher of physics, and the physicist. Well worth a serious read, the book succeeds in being both provocative and instructive on many levels. * Jeffrey Bub, University of Maryland * From relativity and quantum mechanics to consciousness, Silberstein, Stuckey, and McDevitt, take us on an exciting cutting-edge tour of one of the greatest mysteries in science: the nature of time. * Dean Buonomano, University of California, Los Angeles * This book presents a fascinating scientifically informed original metaphysics of nature sure to provoke discussion. And with the price of admission you get a set of wonderfully clear introductions to the cutting edge of modern physics. * William Seager, University of Toronto Scarborough * This important book drives a well-crafted stake through the heart of the dynamical view of time. The dogma that physics doesn't need philosophy is another welcome casualty. * Huw Price, University of Cambridge * Einstein was worried about the exclusion of the 'now' from physics. Perhaps one should worry less. After reading this book an idea deeply grounded in physics emerges: complementary to our subjective experience, 'presence' and 'passage of time' are universal and fundamental properties of reality. * Marc Wittmann, Institute for Frontiers Areas of Psychology and Mental Health * This book is likely to become a crucial resource for future scientific revolutions, despite (or due to) its daring speculative proposals. Indeed, it offers no less than a complete redefinition of science and explanation, abandoning causality in favor of global consistency. By involving consciousness from the outset, instead of vainly wondering what is its material cause , it paves the way to a truly complete view of the world. No aspect of what there is is left aside in this comprehensive book that synergizes physics with philosophy, our knowledge of nature with our knowledge of ourselves. * Michel Bitbol, CNRS/ENS, Archives Husserl *


Author Information

Michael David Silberstein is Professor of Philosophy at Elizabethtown College and Affiliated Faculty in the philosophy department at the University of Maryland, College Park, where he is also a faculty member in the Foundations of Physics Program and a Fellow on the Committee for Philosophy and the Sciences. He is an NEH Fellow. His primary research interests are foundations of physics and foundations of cognitive science, respectively. He is also interested in how these branches of philosophy and science bear on more general questions of reduction, emergence and explanation. Mark Stuckey is a professor of physics at Elizabethtown College where he teaches an array of physics courses to include general relativity and quantum mechanics. He has published in the areas of relativistic cosmology, dark matter, dark energy, quantum gravity, and foundations of physics. Timothy McDevitt is a professor of mathematics at Elizabethtown College where he teaches a variety of math courses. His research is highly interdisciplinary and he has published in applied mechanics, numerical analysis, physics, education, and medicine.

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