The Fabric of the Cosmos: Space, Time, and the Texture of Reality

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Authors: Brian Greene
Tags: science, Cosmology, Physics, Astronomy, Popular works, Universe
Einstein, who had been swept away when they first encountered Mach's ideas.
    Is Mach right? Did Newton get so caught up in the swirl of his bucket that he came to a wishy-washy conclusion regarding space? Does Newton's absolute space exist, or had the pendulum firmly swung back to the relationist perspective? During the first few decades after Mach introduced his ideas, these questions couldn't be answered. For the most part, the reason was that Mach's suggestion was not a complete theory or description, since he never specified
how
the matter content of the universe would exert the proposed influence. If his ideas were right, how do the distant stars and the house next door contribute to your feeling that you are spinning when you spin around? Without specifying a physical mechanism to realize his proposal, it was hard to investigate Mach's ideas with any precision.
    From our modern vantage point, a reasonable guess is that gravity might have something to do with the influences involved in Mach's suggestion. In the following decades, this possibility caught Einstein's attention and he drew much inspiration from Mach's proposal while developing his own theory of gravity, the general theory of relativity. When the dust of relativity had finally settled, the question of whether space is a something—of whether the absolutist or relationist view of space is correct—was transformed in a manner that shattered all previous ways of looking at the universe.
    3 - Relativity and the Absolute
    IS SPACETIME AN EINSTEINIAN ABSTRACTION
OR A PHYSICAL ENTITY?
    Some discoveries provide answers to questions. Other discoveries are so deep that they cast questions in a whole new light, showing that previous mysteries were misperceived through lack of knowledge. You could spend a lifetime—in antiquity, some did—wondering what happens when you reach earth's edge, or trying to figure out who or what lives on earth's underbelly. But when you learn that the earth is round, you see that the previous mysteries are not solved; instead, they're rendered irrelevant.
    During the first decades of the twentieth century, Albert Einstein made two deep discoveries. Each caused a radical upheaval in our understanding of space and time. Einstein dismantled the rigid, absolute structures that Newton had erected, and built his own tower, synthesizing space and time in a manner that was completely unanticipated. When he was done, time had become so enmeshed with space that the reality of one could no longer be pondered separately from the other. And so, by the third decade of the twentieth century the question of the corporeality of space was outmoded; its Einsteinian reframing, as we'll talk about shortly, became: Is
spacetime
a something? With that seemingly slight modification, our understanding of reality's arena was transformed.
    Is Empty Space Empty?
    Light was the primary actor in the relativity drama written by Einstein in the early years of the twentieth century. And it was the work of James Clerk Maxwell that set the stage for Einstein's insights. In the mid-1800s, Maxwell discovered four powerful equations that, for the first time, set out a rigorous theoretical framework for understanding electricity, magnetism, and their intimate relationship. 1 Maxwell developed these equations by carefully studying the work of the English physicist Michael Faraday, who in the early 1800s had carried out tens of thousands of experiments that exposed hitherto unknown features of electricity and magnetism. Faraday's key breakthrough was the concept of the
field.
Later expanded on by Maxwell and many others, this concept has had an enormous influence on the development of physics during the last two centuries, and underlies many of the little mysteries we encounter in everyday life. When you go through airport security, how is it that a machine that doesn't touch you can determine whether you're carrying metallic objects? When you have an MRI, how is it that a

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