Everywhere and Everywhen This page intentionally left blank Everywhere and Everywhen Adventures in Physics and Philosophy Nick Huggett 1 2010 3 OxfordUniversityPress,Inc.,publishesworksthatfurther OxfordUniversity’sobjectiveofexcellence inresearch,scholarship,andeducation. Oxford NewYork Auckland CapeTown DaresSalaam HongKong Karachi KualaLumpur Madrid Melbourne MexicoCity Nairobi NewDelhi Shanghai Taipei Toronto Withofficesin Argentina Austria Brazil Chile CzechRepublic France Greece Guatemala Hungary Italy Japan Poland Portugal Singapore SouthKorea Switzerland Thailand Turkey Ukraine Vietnam Copyright©2010byOxfordUniversityPress,Inc. PublishedbyOxfordUniversityPress,Inc. 198MadisonAvenue,NewYork,NY10016 www.oup.com OxfordisaregisteredtrademarkofOxfordUniversityPress. Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthispublicationmaybereproduced, storedinaretrievalsystem,ortransmitted,inanyformorbyanymeans, electronic,mechanical,photocopying,recording,orotherwise, withoutthepriorpermissionofOxfordUniversityPress. LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData Huggett,Nick. Everywhereandeverywhen:adventuresinphysicsandphilosophy/NickHuggett. p. cm. ISBN 978-0-19-537951-8;978-0-19-537950-1(pbk.) 1. Physics—Philosophy. I. Title. QC6.H824 2009 530.01—dc22 2009016318 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 PrintedintheUnitedStatesofAmerica onacid-freepaper For my paradoxical twins, Kai and Ivor This page intentionally left blank Preface IrememberwhenIdiscoveredthatyoucouldbeaphilosopherofphysics. Iwasinthelibraryofmyschoolstudyingbrochuresforuniversityadmis- sionswhenIcameacrossthePhysicsandPhilosophyprogramatOxford. It made perfect sense to me at the time; physics was my best subject and I’d developed an interest in philosophy in a fairly typical teenage intellectualway.SoIappliedandgotin. Inhindsight,though,I’mnotquitesurewhatIthoughtthephilosoph- ical study of physics was. I certainly didn’t give a very good answer to that question in my admission interview! That was something I learned later, during my studies. (In fact, according to Rom Harré, a founder of the program at Oxford, the intention was not to produce philosophers ofphysics,butfutureleaders,wellgroundedinreasoning,ethics,andthe sciences.) Still, I found that my youthful intuition was reliable, and after I completed my undergraduate studies I went on to Rutgers University in New Jersey, where I was lucky enough to work with some of the best and most generous philosophers of physics I have ever met. Best of all, afterward I found a job where I could research and teach my subject, at theUniversityofIllinoisinChicago. So now my only problem is explaining to people—parents, friends, neighbors on planes and at dinner parties, and especially physicists and philosophers—what it is that I do. Something to do with the ethics of science? That’s an important topic, but generally not part of philosophy ofphysics.OrperhapstheconnectionsbetweenBuddhismandquantum physics? That idea was popularized in the 1970s by Fritjof Capra and GaryZukav,butit’snotwhatmostphilosophersofphysicsareinterested in. Or is it an attempt to tell physicists what must be the case by pure speculation, regardless of the facts of experiment? Or perhaps to show that physics is nothing but a social fabrication, that truth about the physical world is not objective but whatever physicists decide. Well, the sociological dimensions of science are interesting, and some people do takeaveryhardline,butmostphilosophersofphysicstakeveryseriously physics’ ability to get at objective truth—and they think that it is the ultimatestandard,notpurespeculation. Sothisbookistoexplaintoallthosepeoplesomeofthewaysinwhich physicsandphilosophycanbeinfruitfuldialogue—itisthatdialoguethat viii Preface engages philosophers of physics (and, as we’ll see, many physicists). We shall see that indeed the traffic is two-way: while physics has important lessons for philosophy, the kind of investigations at which philosophers excelarenecessaryinscience,andsomeofthemostimportantadvancesin physics have required philosophical contemplation. To be more specific, wewillseethreemainkindsofinteraction. First, there are cases in which philosophical questions can be for- mulated in a precise way in physics and then addressed with resources of physics. For instance, could space have an edge? Second, there are cases in which ideas used in physics turn out to be conceptually unclear or incompatible with new knowledge in physics. What physics requires here is a careful analysis of the concepts and an understanding of how they are used. That kind of work is philosophical, though it is often done by physicists—‘philosopher-scientists’, as Einstein was described. For instance, what is it for events to be “simultaneous”? And third and finally,thefactthatwearephysicalbeingslivinginaphysicalworldofa specific type has profound consequences for the way we experience the world. Having an understanding of these consequences is crucial for a clear philosophical view of a variety of problems. How, for instance, do weperceiveleftversusrighthandedness? To see these things in more detail, naturally we’ll need to introduce some physics and philosophy. You’ll notice some difference between the two here. The physics will be presented largely as the materials for our discussion, while I will be showing you how to think about the physics like a philosopher. When you read a popular book on physics, the goal usually is to explain recent developments in terms that are accessible to the layperson; the details themselves take years of study even for very smartpeople.Thebestbooksofthiskinddoagreatjobofexplicatingthe fundamental ideas and implications, but of course they don’t make you a physicist. I have a rather different ambition for this book. This is not a book that just seeks to explain recent developments in philosophy of physics—though we will talk about some of them—but one that aims to help the reader really think philosophically about physics and the physical world. Having taken ten years in higher education to become a philosopher, I hesitate to say that this book will make the reader a philosopherofphysics,butIdohopeitwillshowthewayandallowafirst stepinthatdirection.Toputitanotherway,thebookdoesn’tjustreport onphilosophy,itdoesittoo,andIhopethatexamplewillbeuseful. Asaresultthisbookwillbedemandinginplaces.Philosophyinvolves patient reasoning, canvassing of different possible positions, step-by-step argument, and to-and-fro. Sometimes it takes effort to keep the logic of thetopicclear.However,I’vepickedpiecesofphysicsandofphilosophy thataresuitableforageneralaudience(I’vetaughtthesetopicstoalotof undergraduatesofverydifferentabilities,soIhaveaprettygoodsenseof whatisdigestible).ThebottomlineisthatI’vepickedtopicsthatshould Preface ix befullycomprehensibletoanyonewhoispreparedtoapplysomecareful thought. Iofferthefollowingdeal:inreturnforcarefullythinkingthroughsome sometimes challenging (but always interesting, I hope!) arguments, the readerwillstarttolearntobeaphilosopherofphysics. Here’stheplanofaction.InthefirstchapterIwillgiveanexampleof aphilosophicalproblemsothatthereadercanseerightawaywhatkinds of concerns and what kinds of approaches drive the book. We’ll also fill in some of the physics background that we need, and some important philosophical concepts (just what is a ‘law’ of physics?). Chapters2–3 discuss Zeno’s paradoxes, which challenge the very idea of motion. For instance,anarrowcannotmoveduringanyinstantbecauseaninstanthas noduration.Butifitdoesn’tmoveatanytimethenhowdoesitmoveat all? Chapters4–6concerntheoverall‘shape’ofspace,forinstancewhether it has an edge, whether it is ‘closed up’ on itself, and whether it has more than three dimensions, and if not why? Chapters7–8 continue the discussion of the shape of space in a different direction, investigating its geometry.Isitflat?Whatwoulditmeanifitweren’t?Howcouldwetell? Andgenerally,whatdoesitmeantosayspaceiscurved?Chapter9com- pletes the discussionof spaceby askingthe obvious remaining question– whatisit? Chapters10–11takeuptheissueoftime.Timeseemssodifferentfrom space: for instance, we certainly experience time differently than we do space, as something ‘moving’. How could physics account for this fact? Chapters12–13 are devoted to another puzzling aspect of time: is time travel possible? We’ll see possibilities and restrictions, and see ultimately howitisacoherentpossibility. Chapters14–15explainandinvestigateEinstein’srelativity,whichcru- cially changes our understanding of space and time. The presentation is a little more rigorous than most popular presentations, but all that is involved is a simple, if unfamiliar, geometry. We will be able to show why moving bodies contract and why moving clocks slow down, and understandwhatthismeans. Chapters16–18aredevotedtosomeissuesthathavebeenofparticular interest to me. First is the question of what it is for an object to be left rather than right; what is it about a left hand, or left-handed glove, or left-handed screw that makes it left rather than right? After all, all these thingsarevery,verysimilartotheirmirrorimages.Andthenthereisthe question of identity and indistinguishability in physics. The particles of physicsareexactlyalike,sodoesitmakeanydifferenceiftheyswaptheir locations,say?Aretheylikemoneyinthebankoraretheylikepeople? A note on citations. To maintain an informal style I have gathered annotated references at the end of each chapter instead of inserting citations in the main text. I have also omitted certain more technical
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