Curious6 said:
straycat, do you think then once a quantum theory of gravity is found, it will reveal what the true nature of matter really is?
I think once a quantum theory of gravity (or whatever we decide to call it) is found, it will answer all sorts of questions. But it may raise even more. Keep in mind that quantum mechanics raised all sorts of questions along the lines of "what the hell is 'reality'?" I think the question: "what is reality," at least in the case of QM, depends upon which *interpretation* of QM one ascribes to. IOW, this question is not answered by the theory itself. A TOE or a GUT or whatever may or may not suggest a particular answer. It is possible, for instance, that we may come up with a quantum theory of gravity that, like present-day QM, has more than one interpretation, each of which hinges on a different concept of "reality."
Curious6 said:
I raised this idea about virtual particles perhaps being 'concentrations' of spacetime because I read that Einstein once did and Michio Kaku does believe it. Also, you have referred to papers published 50-70 years ago, and one from 1994, but is there any more recent interest in this as part of string theory perhaps?
It's hard for me to comment on string theory. My limited understanding of string theory is that it is a bunch of mathematics that are not yet grounded in physical principles, and so not yet amenable to physical "interpretation." It may be that the notion that "a particle is a concentration of spacetime" is buried down deep in string theory, but it's too early to say afaict.
Here's another paper [1] that is related. I'm sure there are others that I don't know about.
Hadley has a bunch of papers besides the one I cited - I can give you refs if anyone is interested. In fact, he is a member of a yahoo group, QM_from_GR, where we talk about this and related notions.
BTW I would recommend Kip Thorne's book _Black Holes and Time Warps_ as an excellent pop-sci book that delves into the quantum foam idea.
David
[1] Holzhey, C. F. E. and Wilczek, F. Black Holes as Elementary Particles, Nuclear Physics B380, 447 (1992). ArXiv:hep-th/9202014. or http://www.elsevier.nl/gej-ng/29/35/27/17/10/13/summary.html