First of all, as you read more and more you'll realize how little we understand but how much we can describe..."We know much we understand little".
If theorists are describing space as a discrete lattice from a relational point of view, why couldn't it have already existed as a discrete lattice before the big bang from an absolute view?
Theorists have no idea what initiated the big bang...nobody knows if space is continuous (as in relativity) or discrete as in quantum mechanics...all big bang theories have a start for unknown reasons and the THEORY is right after it starts. Roger Penrose does not even agree inflation solves the problems that need to be solved.
On page 18, Smolin says, "It is even absurd to speak of a space with only one thing in it, for there would be no relationships to define where that one thing is". Does that make sense?
Smolin I think refers to the fact to that speed, for example, is relative. You can obeserve a plane from reference (frame) of Earth and see it move a t one speed; from the plane it seems like it moves not at all; ever sit in a train at a station and watch another train go by..except for feeling of bumps, you can't tell who is moving...
But, if spacetime is absolute, then it would be the "stage" onto which the big bang exploded and its lattice would be the defining points for where that one thing is.
So far scientists believe that if the big bang is correct, nothing existed before it started...
Depends just exactly what you mean. Absolute spacetime was proven incorrect by Einstein since mass,energy,pressure curves/bends it and speed makes in contract...there not even absolute energy..kinetic and potential energy depends on the observer...
So why are their lines of force in space? (Is this another stupid question?)
Electromagnetic and gravitational forces all extend to infinity while decreasing in strength...gravity and electromagnetic vary as 1/R
2...for example...I believe the strong force rises as quarks are separated then stays steady and really strong to infinity..that's why we can't find quarks floating around individually.
Another issue I'm having is found on page 106. From pages 100-105, he is desribing one of the reasons they believe space is discrete in the first place. He says that a discrete space preserves the second law of thermodynamics as it relates to black holes.
he is probably referring to the holographic principle here and definitely is on page 102 when he says "a law of physics that allows information to be converted into geometry..." and that gre from Beckenstein's bound which even Hawking did not believe at first...
So another theory is that we are all about information, NOT atoms nor lattices...
But on page 106, he says that if you half a volume of discrete space it creates two new regions that, together, give you more volume than you started with. Well, wait a minute, isn't this contradicting the FIRST law of thermodynamics?? This appears to be an issue. Or am I missing something? My first assumption is that I'm missing something, but I can't figure out what it is (perhaps a page I haven't gotten to yet?).
I highlighted that and had a question mark...I don't know. He is referring to Placnk scale geometries, about 10
-33 cm...and an aspect of loop quntum gravity...If you are interested, I'd pose that as a separate question in "Beyond the standard model"...He describes it a bit on the top of page 107..."As with volume, the theory limits the possible areas a surface can have to a finite set of values...jumps between areas.." so apparently some solutions of loop quantum gravity appear as something like 1/N, where N is any integer and you don't get values inbetween...(just a crude analogy)
Finally, on page 183, he says that string theorists biggest problem is making the theory background independant.
I'll see if I can find a current discussion in the forums on that issue...one thing you can search for is "emergent spacetime"...
But, since we still don't know what spacetime is - and it could well be an absolute, defining structure for our universe in lattice form that the big bang fills into - then I don't see where the problem is. Maybe background dependence is the rule. Or, maybe, there is no quantum gravity at all! Either way, I'm an avid supporter of the search.
I don't know of any major theorist who believes space is an everlasting absolute structure...at least I have no read that yet; but also remember "everybody" has been wrong in physics over and over and over.
I have not read all of the book because it is difficult to read.
I have read about 20 such texts and each has it obstacles to understanding...in part because the authors can only go so far in their own theoretical understanding...but each adds some new understanding and perspective...this stuff is VERY detailed and it took me about two years of reading on my own to begin to tie different concepts together...
Perhaps you should give Smolin's book THE TROUBLE WITH PHYSICS a try...it's also excellent and discusses what Smolin believes physicts don't understand or don't agree on among themselves. The ELEGANT UNIVERSE by Grian Greene and THE BLACK HOLE WARS by Leonard Susskind and BLACK HOLES AND TIME WARPS by Kip Thorne are all excellent.
I have read all once and most twice or more and am now repeating the last one again...