Kea
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Let's vote
The thread discusses the fundamental nature of various theories in quantum gravity, including string theory, loop quantum gravity, causal set theory, and computational approaches. Participants explore the merits and limitations of these theories, as well as their interrelations and foundational aspects.
Participants express a range of views on the fundamental nature of quantum gravity theories, with no consensus reached. Disagreements exist regarding the validity and foundational status of string theory, loop quantum gravity, and computational approaches.
Participants acknowledge various assumptions and limitations in their arguments, such as the dependence on definitions of fundamental concepts and the unresolved status of certain mathematical formulations.
This discussion may be of interest to researchers and enthusiasts in theoretical physics, particularly those focused on quantum gravity, computational theories, and the philosophical implications of foundational physics.
String theory/ M-theory have branes and strings as submanifolds imbedded in a background spacetime which is not explained. What obviously needs to be done is to explain where spacetime came from to begin with and how particles arise from that. CDT seems to be the most direct approach. I think that strings and LQG will turn out to be some holomorphic properties of spacetime distortions.Curious6 said:I don't see why the majority of people on this sub-forum are so anti-stringy. M-Theory has many more researchers than any other approach to quantum gravity, and it is probably for a reason. No doubt it is going through a hard moment now with the string landscape, but that doesn't mean it is wrong, maybe just that it has been heading temporarily down the wrong path. Probably when a nonperturbative formulation of M-theory is found it will provide the most unified and fundamental framework of theoretical physics.
The most promising approach to QG at present is