An edition of Cosmology, physics, and philosophy (1981)

"Core Curriculum Course" "Cosmology, Physics and Philosophy

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Last edited by MARC Bot
October 21, 2020 | History
An edition of Cosmology, physics, and philosophy (1981)

"Core Curriculum Course" "Cosmology, Physics and Philosophy

Cosmology, Physics and Philosophy

Table of Contents
(The last two Volumes published FREE online)

VOLUME I [Out of print. May only be purchased online as hardcover used book]

Worldwide Acclaims ……………………………………...……… ii SIR KARL POPPER, Foreword ……………….……………..…. xx SIR ALAN COTTRELL, Foreword ………………….………..... xxi Preface ……………………………………..….……….…..……... xxii

Introduction …………..………………………..…………………. 2 1.1 The Revival of Relativistic Cosmology vs. Modified Concepts in Physics and Philosophy …………………...….… 2 1.1.1 The problem of ordering ……………………...….… 3 1.1.2 How did it all start? ………………………………... 5 1.1.3 The first seven stages …………………………….... 7
1.1.4 The present matter-dominated era …………………….. 11 2.1 The Einsteinian Methodology: A Preliminary Remark . 11 2.2 The Withdrawal of Philosophy From Physics (and of Physics From Philosophy) …………………………….…...… 13 2.3 The Greatest Ambition of Physics ……………………..…...... 16 2.3.1 Unification of initial-boundary conditions first? Unification of fields second? …………………...….... 16 2.3.2 Should unification begin with differential equations? …………………..…….…...… 17 2.4 The Great Physico-Philosophical Gains From The Discovery of the Cosmic Background Radiation ……….. 19 2.5 The Expanding Universe ………………………….…….…... 22 2.6 The 1977 “Aether Drift” Discovery ……………..………....…. 23 2.7 Verification of Physical Laws by Astronomy and Astrophysics ……………………………………….……….… 24 3.1 Some Tentative Assertions …...……………………..…...….. 26 3.2 The Skeptic’s Outlook .……………………...………..…...….. 69

PART I: Preliminary Concepts

1.From Terrestrial Gravitational Structures To Black Holes and Neutrinos in Astrophysics ……...…….. 74 1.1 Gravitation, Asymmetry and Structure ………………….…… 80 A fallacy associated with current theories ……………….........…. 80 1.1.2 Gravity-induced sedimentary structures …………... 81 1.2 Stars and the Hertzsprung-Russel Central Diagram ……….. 88 1.3 Supernovae, Gravitational Collapse, Neutron Stars, Pulsars …………………………………….. 92 1.4 X-Ray Astronomy, Binary X-Ray Systems, and Gravitational Clocks ……………………………………... 100 1.5 Black Holes …………………………………………….… 106 1.6 Gas, Dust and the Formation of Stars in Our Galaxy ….… 113 1.7 How Are Cosmic Distances Measured? ………………… 116 1.8 Neutrino Astronomy and Astrophysics ………………… 130 1.9 The Emergence of Gamma-Ray Astronomy ……………. 132 1.10 Exploration of Extra-Solar Space By Unmanned Spacecraft ……………………………….. 134

2.From “Conservation” in Classical Physics To Solitons in Particle Physics ………………………..…… 136 2.1 Aim and Scope …………………………………………... 138 2.2 Limitations of Theory …………………………………… 140 2.3 The General Macroscopic Equation …………………….. 142 2.4 Continuity Equation (Total Mass Conservation) ………... 146 2.5 Conservation of Linear Momentum and Gravity.………… 147 2.6 The Navier-Stokes Equations and Gravity ………………. 149 2.7 Kinetic-Energy Equation and Dissipation Function in Gravitational Fields ……………. 152 2.8 First Law of Thermodynamics or Energy Conservation Equation …………………………………… 154 2.9 First Law and Enthalpy ………………………………….. 156 2.10 First Law In Terms of Temperature Field ……………….. 157 2.11 Entropy Balance Equation ……………………………….. 159 2.12 Beyond Classical Physics: Solitons, Antisolitons and Conservation …………………. 160 2.13 Neutrinos and the Powerful Role Conservation Equations Play in Subatomic Processes (Addendum) …… 163

3.From General Relativity and Relativistic Cosmology To Gauge Theories …………………………..……………….. 166 3.1 Introduction ……………………………………………….... 167 3.1.1 Einstein’s field equations in general relativity ……….….. 169 3.1.2 Confirmation of Einstein’s Theory of Gravitation ………. 172 3.2 Principles and Formulations of General Relativity and Relativistic Cosmology ………………...……….…………… 181 3.3 Observations, The “Age” of the Universe And “Equivalent Local Cells” …………………….……….… 200 3.4 Timekeeping, Accelerated Observers and the Principle Of Equivalence ………………………….………… 204 3.5 From General Relativity to Unified Field Theories ………… 205

PART II: From Physics to Philosophical Crossroads and Back

1.The Arrows of Time ……………………………….…..….…... 214 4.1 Time and The Arrow of Time: The Most Distorted Of All Ideas? ………………………….. 215 4.2 Asymmetry-Symmetry-Space-Time and The Unification of The Laws of Physics …………………… 216 4.3 Methodology, Aim and Scope ……………………………… 217 4.4 Confusing Concepts of Time and Time Asymmetries ……… 219 4.5 The Entropic Arrow of Time ……………………………….. 222 4.6 Causality, Causation and Time Asymmetries ………………. 226 4.7 Causation and Determinism in Relativistic Theories ………………………………………… 227 4.8 Cosmological Arrows of Time and Cosmic Time …………. 230 4.9 A Few Remarks ……………………………………...…….. 232 4.10 Time-Reversal Invariance and Irreversibility …………….… 236 4.11 Microscopic Time Asymmetries in “Elementary Particles” ………………………….……….. 240 4.12 The Death of Scale-Based Physics ……………….………… 242 4.13 The “Dual” Quantum-Geometrodynamical School and “Superspace” ………………………………….. 243 4.14 Tachyons and Causal Violations …………………….……… 246 4.15 Macrocausality and Microcausality in Quantum Mechanics … 247 4.16 Fading Memory in Classical Physics ……………………….. 247 4.17 Doubts As To The Universality of Entropy ………………… 249 4.18 Entropy-Free Thermodynamic Arrows of Time ………….…. 250

2.The Crisis In Quantum Physics ………………………….…… 254
5.1 Preliminary Review …………………………………….……. 255 5.1.1 The effect of gravitation and the outside world on quantum physics …………………………..…. 258 5.1.2 The three main schools of thought ………………….… 261 5.2 Einstein’s Objections to the Uncertainty Principle ………….. 262 5.3 The Heresy of a Few Skeptics …………………………….…. 265 5.4 Mythologized Concepts of Quantum Physics …………….…. 265 5.5 The Failure of Classical and Quantal Statistical Mechanics to Deduce Irreversibility and Time Asymmetries ……………………………………………….… 267 5.6 The Emergence of Quantum Chromodynamics And Super-Symmetry ………………………………………... 272 5.6.1 Spatio-Temporal Approach to Quantum Physics …….. 272 5.6.2 From Weinberg-Salam Theory to Quantum Chromodynamics …………………………... 273 5.6.2.1 Conservation laws as symmetry principles; and vice versa …………………………………... 273 5.6.2.2 Global, exact, approximate, isotopic and SU(3) symmetries ………………………..… 274 5.6.2.3 From SU(3) to renormalizable gauge theories ……………………………………….... 276 5.6.2.4 Quark confinement asymptotic freedom in gauge theories ……………………………. 276-1 5.6.2.5 QCD and the search for higher symmetry principles …………………………………… 276-1 5.6.3 From Quantum Field Theories to Super-Symmetry Super-Gravity …………………………………….… 276-3 5.6.3.1 On the limits of super-gravity ‘unified field theories’ ………………………... 276-4

PART III: From Physics to Cosmological Crossroads and Back

1.Cosmology, Physics and Philosophy ………………………. 277 6.1 Reduction of Thermodynamics to Gravitation ………… 277 6.1.1 Methodology ……………………………………. 277 Dialectical gravitism: Definition of the first problems …………………………………… 278 6.1.3 Gravitation as super-asymmetry ……………….. 279 6.2 The Earliest and Most Universal Asymmetry: Observational Evidence …………………..………...….. 279 6.2.1 Which space expands and which does not? …...… 282 6.3 Gravitation-Asymmetry Principle of Equivalence ……. 284 6.4 Can Intercluster Space Be Saturated With Radiation? … 287 6.5 Derivation of the Master Asymmetry From Gravitation Theories ………………………...…. 290 6.6 Irreversibility in the New Gravitational Cosmological Thermodynamics …………………...…. 293 6.7 Origin of Dissipation in Newtonian Fluids ………..…. 297 6.8 Terrestrial Thermodynamics ……………………..…… 299 6.9 Connections With Classical and Continuum Thermodynamics …………………………………..…. 301 6.10 Electromagnetic Irreversibility And the Master Asymmetry …………………….....….. 303

2.Cosmological Origin of Time and Evolution …………….… 308 7.1 Time: The All-Embracing Concept ………………….. 309 7.2 Cosmological Origin of Time ………………………. 310 7.3 Cosmological Interpretations of Newton’s Laws of Motion …………………………………..…. 314 7.4 Gravitational Origin of Structure and Evolution .…… 316 7.5 Gravitation and the Outflow of Energy Into Un-Saturable Space ………………………………… 322 7.6 Stellar Evolution ……………………………………. 324 7.7 Terrestrial Evolution ………………………………... 325 7.8 Some Open Questions ……………………………… 326
7.8.1 Microscopic T-Violation and the Master Asymmetry: A possible Connection? ………..… 327

3.Black Holes and the Unification of Asymmetries ……… 329 8.1 Introduction ……………………………………….. 330 8.2 Observational Evidence …………………………… 331 8.3 Schwarzschild Solution and Black Holes …………. 332 8.4 Black Holes Mechanics and Entropy ……………… 340 8.5 Can Black Holes “Evaporate”? ……………………. 341 8.6 Primordial Black Holes? …………………………... 341 8.7 Back to the Melting Pot of Unification? …………... 341

PART IV: Beyond Present Knowledge

1.Havahyism – The Science of The Whole …………..…… 348 9.1 The Futile Quest for Final Answers ……………….. 349 9.2 An Example in Havahyism ……………………..…. 350 9.3 From Cosmology to Irreversible Structures and Memory ……………………………………..…. 365 9.4 The Skeptic Outlook ……………………………..…. 415
VOLUME II [Out of print. May only be purchased as hardcover used book]

Critique of Western Thought

Introduction ………………………………………………….... 420

1.A Few Historical Remarks on Time, Mind and Symmetry ………………………………………..… 437

2.The Philosophy of Time & Change: Some Historical Notions …………………….………… 455

3.Structuralism and the Divided American Thought: A Short Glossary of Terms …………………………….. 467

4.Policy and Publicity: A Critique ………………………. 483

5.Thought-Provoking and Thought-Depressing Quotations ………………………………………………. 495

6.Critique of Western Methodology …………………….. 530

VOLUME III

ONLINE DRAFT PUBLISHED on

Dec. 15, 2007 by Benjamin Gal-Or [Photon03, SCRIBD]

1.Introduction ………………………………………..…………… 11

2.From Cosmology to the Foundations of Physics ………..…….. 29

3.Gravity-Induced Brain-Mind Perception Vs. Everyday Life …44

4.How Did It All Start? …………………………………………… 55

5.‘Gravitational Selection’ Vs. 'Natural Selection' ……….……... 64

6.Condensed World History …………………………………...… 69

7.The Skeptic Outlook ……………………………………….….. 94

8.Beyond Present Knowledge …………………………………… 100

9.CCCC Homework …………………………………………….. 103

References and Further Reading …………………..…………... 122

Publish Date
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Language
English
Pages
522

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Edition Availability
Cover of: "Core Curriculum Course" "Cosmology, Physics and Philosophy
"Core Curriculum Course" "Cosmology, Physics and Philosophy
1981, 1983, 1987, Springer-Verlag
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Published in
New York
Series
"Core Curriculum Course: Cosmology, Physics & Philosophy"

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
530/.01
Library of Congress
QC6.2 .G34 1983

The Physical Object

Pagination
xv, 522 p. :
Number of pages
522

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL4259659M
LCCN
81005257

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