The fabric of reality : the science of parallel universes and its implications /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Deutsch, David, 1953-
Edition:1st American ed.
Imprint:New York : Allen Lane, 1997.
Description:x, 390 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/2732342
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:0713990619 (alk. paper)
Notes:Includes bibliographical references (p. 367-[369]) and index.
Review by Choice Review

Deutsch's book is one to be read slowly and carefully. It is full of scientific insights, but at the same time it is full of terms such as "solipsism," "crypto-inductivist," decoherence" and so on that would make it difficult for laypersons to read. Deutsch attempts to make it more accessible by using a relatively relaxed style of writing, and this helps. A glossary at the end of each chapter also helps. He shows that quantum physics, evolution, computation, and knowledge are intricately related. In doing this he delves into many interesting topics such as parallel universes, time travel, virtual reality, and quantum computation. Deutsch is a well-known authority in the area and, as a result, the book contains many interesting ideas that have not before appeared in print. The book is similar in many ways to several books on the "Theory of Everything" that have appeared recently, such as John D. Barrow's Theories of Everything (CH, Nov'91) and David Lindley's The End of Physics (CH, Dec'93), but it is more encompassing. Highly recommended for readers with a background in science. Upper-division undergraduates through professional. B. R. Parker formerly, Idaho State University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review

In the library of physics for laypeople, Deutsch's book is unique. Correction: it is multiversal, existing in innumerable universes that Deutsch argues exist alongside the "real" universe that people perceive. Explaining that, and persuading the reader of its scientific truth, makes this work unique. Another of Deutsch's mindbenders is that each person could be resurrected near the Big Crunch (if there is one) by a universal computer with infinite memory, a conclusion discussed (and unfairly dismissed by most scientists, according to Deutsch) in Frank Tipler's The Physics of Immortality (1994). Deutsch, a quantum physicist at Oxford University, builds toward the computerized second coming on the basis of the well-known, reproducible experiment that conclusively establishes the quantum nature of light and of reality. He then discusses three more topics--computation theory, evolution, and epistemology--combining them with quantum theory to construct his Theory of Everything, the grail of all theoretical physicists. Deutsch allows that his is a minority view among his peers, but the confidence with which he presents his views, and the absence of condescension in his style, accesses nonscientists to his seemingly alien world(s). --Gilbert Taylor

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Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Philosophy, biology, computer science and quantum physics all converge in this ambitious theoretical work by Deutsch, an expert in quantum computation at Oxford University. Interweaving the four disciplines, Deutsch provides a model of reality that is as provocative as it is complex. Building on such diverse topics as the evolution of knowledge, biological Darwinism, time travel, virtual reality and parallel universes, Deutsch describes a reality where parallel universes are "stacked like a pack of playing cards" to comprise a "multiverse," with computers communicating between them, where the mechanics and likelihood of time travel exist and where the universe comes to an end. Though many of Deutsch's conclusions and their core assumptions are controversial‘which to his credit, he acknowledges‘the work remains an intellectually stimulating read for the science-literate and motivated lay person, in the tradition of Hawking's A Brief History of Time and Hofstadter's Gödel, Escher, Bach. The author exhibits not only a thorough knowledge of his subject matter but a genuine desire to draw the lay reader into the complexities, paradoxes and possibilities surrounding quantum physics. In a particularly effective manner, each chapter begins by outlining basic scientific history or concepts before delving into the complex, and ends with a glossary and summary, both invaluable tools for the lay reader. In a field where scientific inquiry challenges not only our imagination but basic assumptions about our physical world, this volume provides the essential information needed for future debates, regardless of whether Deutsch's conclusions are ever accepted as scientific doctrine. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Common sense and reality diverge and then come together again in this mind-blowing book. Maintaining that the best explanation for certain quantum phenomena is that there are parallel universes, i.e., multiverses, Oxford physicist Deutsch posits and then attempts to unify four basic strands‘quantum physics, epistemology, evolution, and the theory of computation. Just one astonishing consequence is that quantum computers can collaborate between universes. Deutsch's ideas are exotic and challenging, but his text is surprisingly accessible, and he supplies a glossary and summary at the end of every chapter. For motivated readers, this book is a feast for the mind. Strongly recommended for academic and larger public libraries.‘Gregg Sapp, Univ. of Miami Lib., Coral Gables, Fla. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

One major school of quantum theory posits a multiplicity of universes; but what does that imply about the reality we live in? A simple experiment, familiar to every student of physics, involves light passing through slits in a barrier; its results, according to Oxford physicist Deutsch, lead inevitably to the idea that there are countless universes parallel to our own, through which some of the light must pass. This ``many worlds'' interpretation of quantum theory has gained advocates in recent years, and Deutsch argues that it is time for scientists to face the full implications of this idea. (After all, the entire point of science is to help us understand the world we live in--the ``fabric of reality'' of his title.) To that end, he outlines a new view of the multiverse (the total of all the parallel universes), combining ideas from four ``strands'' of science: quantum physics, epistemology, the theory of computation, and modern evolutionary theory. He argues that quantum computation, a discipline in which he is a pioneering thinker, has the potential for building computers that draw on their counterparts in parallel universes; this could make artificial intelligence a reality, despite Roger Penrose's objections (which Deutsch deals with in some detail). Likewise, time travel into both the future and the past should be possible, though not in quite the form envisioned by science fiction writers; the trips would almost certainly be one-way, and they would likely take the travelers into different universes from the one they began in. Deutsch takes particular pains to refute Thomas Kuhn's ``paradigm'' model of science, which essentially denies progress. A final chapter looks at the long-range implications of his views, including the place of esthetic and moral values (areas more scientists now seem willing to confront). Not easy going by any means, but worth the work for anyone interested in the thought processes of a scientist on the leading edge of his discipline.

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