I'm enagaged in the battle against woo, wackyvorlon. In that respect I'm not that different to Randi or Dawkins, but I'm interested in different things. I don't care a fig about the paranormal or creationism, they really don't feature much in the UK where I live. Instead I'm interested in physics. It's a
save the planet thing. Sounds trite I know, but
save physics, save the planet really starts to sound important when you get into the fundamentals of matter and energy.
It kicked off big time back in 2005 when our two older children gave up all their science subjects. In addition the Maths Tower at Manchester University had been demolished (I used to have classes there on things like impedance), I found out that physics A levels were down 56% in twenty years, and I got concerned that the world was dumbing down. So I thought I'd do my bit and started giving "homework help" on physicsforums. I do maths tutoring now and then, so a lot of it was a piece of cake even though you're not supposed to do their homework for them. But I found myself struggling to answer the big questions like
What is time?, and getting brickbats for trying. After a while I came to realise that there was an issue with the terms like t and E and m and C in the equations. Nobody seemed to realise what they really meant, and there was a circularity in the definitions. So I wrote a bunch of internet essays like
Time Explained and
Energy Explained. They were pretty rubbish to start off with, but I got feedback and improved them.
Then I found out about
The Trouble with Physics. That was a laugh. If you do a search-inside you see references to "seer". And I'd been using the username "Farsight" since 2002 when I was on ADVFN. That's a shares website, Farsight was all about being a farsighted stockpicker. Anyway, in a kind of daisy-chain fashion I ended up reading a whole stack of papers that you don't get to hear about. Plus a lot of original material that was nothing like what they said it was like. I came to realise that modern physics was infested with quacks peddling stuff like time travel and the multiverse. None of it was backed up by scientific evidence at all. Instead it was insulated from the scientific evidence and engineered to be non-falsifiable. What
was backed up by the scientific evidence was the many and various papers I'd read. It all pointed back to relativity and electromagnetism. And with that came the distinct impression that relativity was the Cinderella of modern physics. She has some ugly sisters. Take a good look at that thread we were talking on to catch my drift. It was a relativity question, but now it's a string theory thread.
Another "woo" subject I find myself getting into is quantum mysticism, which is peddled to attract attention and sell books and magazines. I was talking about it today as it happens: see the physicsworld article
Catching sight of the elusive wavefunction along with
The secret lives of photons revealed. For more details read
A Physics-based Disproof of Bell's Theorem by Ed Klingman, where I get a mention. Or see
Jeff Lundeen's home page. It's looking like wavefunction is real along with the wave nature of matter, and an interaction is something like a Fourier transform rather than a probability collapse caused by the God-like act of observation. In a nutshell, the Copenhagen Interpretation is shot to pot, and only fit for popscience hereon. It's on the way out, and I'm pleased to say I've done my bit.