Quantum Beauty

Frank Wilczek
Herman Feshbach Professor of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
December 11, 2012

spacer Does the world embody beautiful ideas? This is a question that people have thought about for a long time. Pythagoras and Plato intuited that the world should embody beautiful ideas; Newton and Maxwell demonstrated how the world could embody beautiful ideas, in specific impressive cases. Finally in the twentieth century in modern physics, and especially in quantum physics, we find a definitive answer: Yes! The world does embody beautiful ideas.

In this special lecture hosted by the School of Mathematics, Frank Wilczek presents the intellectual history of this question and discusses how esthetic considerations continue to guide our search for ultimate physical laws.

Tags: 
Mathematical Physics
School of Mathematics
Astrophysics

More like this

  • Think Globally, Act Locally: Physical Models of Galaxy Formation in a Cosmological Framework
  • The Physics of Radiation-Driven Outflows in Active Galactic Nuclei
  • QUESTION SESSION ON GRASSMANNIANS, POLYTOPES AND QUANTUM FIELD THEORY
  • QUESTION SESSION ON GRASSMANNIANS, POLYTOPES AND QUANTUM FIELD THEORY
  • QUESTION SESSION ON GRASSMANNIANS, POLYTOPES AND QUANTUM FIELD THEORY
gipoco.com is neither affiliated with the authors of this page nor responsible for its contents. This is a safe-cache copy of the original web site.