Book Review
From what I can gather, in three pages of posts on this book, we have yet to see a single person who has actually read it??? Except the author of course. As it turns out, I bought the book a few weeks ago because the excerpts looked interesting and its references were impeccable (Allen’s astrophysical constants, Lang’s astrophysical formulas, etc). I have finished the book recently, and have a few comments, based on my astrophysics background. First, it’s a gorgeous volume, and its diagrams, images and graphs have been professionally done. Think college textbook quality. Second, quite aside from the fascinating (and original) theory it presents, there are a number of excellent data reductions, from Sion’s and McCooks white dwarf catalog, to the BATSE burster catalog to the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. I also enjoyed the simplified white dwarf cooling model listed in one of the Appendixes. Never seen that done in two pages before. Many of the particle field expressions required numerical solutions, but I reviewed the source code (written in c) on the website and it was consistent with the graphs and equations. The one prediction that would probably give the book the most traction is the ~1.5 km/s coreward galactic inflow of the Milky Way. This is derived three different ways using three independent datasets (galactic composition/output, galactic luminosity profile, white dwarf age). Unfortunately, this motion is going to be tough to substantiate because most of the large-scale stellar surveys like RAVE are strictly heliocentric scalar magnitudes, and you can’t use that to evaluate coreward motion. Vectorizing RAVE would be one big, expensive project. I doubt that the NSF will jump on that one anytime soon, after the billions of dollars it has invested in the standard cosmological model. Too bad. I’d love to see the results. To summarize, I think the book is comprehensive, compelling, very well written, and a great read for anyone interested in physics’ foundational issues. I got so sucked into Part IV (physical null cosmology) that I completely missed a staff meeting. I can’t remember the last time I felt a true sense of discovery while reading a physics text (except perhaps my first foray into GR). Felt like a breath of fresh air. The physics is certainly NOT high-school level, but I checked and that is not what is claimed on the website. The claim is that someone familiar with high-school physics should be able to follow it. I agree. I think this book would be a great experience for an AP physics student with a little calculus under their belt, because all of the calculations are straightforward and use baby steps from beginning to end. Also, with so many graphs, it looks like a layperson might be able to skip the math entirely, but I’m not the best judge of that. There’s an extensive glossary to help the physics neophytes.
After I finished this book, I was so baffled by the bizarre mismatch between its content and marketing that I emailed NULLPHYSICS.COM to ask why I was first hearing about this book in a gadget magazine like popular science??? I was told that about two dozen copies of the book have been out for peer review since August 2007, and the soonest review will probably be coming from the Canadian Astronomical Society near the end of the year, although any of them could happen sooner/later. They had wanted to delay the book’s release until some peer reviews were available, but thought it was more important to introduce the book prior to the holiday season in anticipation of the reviews. Not sure why the author didn’t mention the pending reviews in his posts, but he was probably so busy taking body blows from random directions that he may have been distracted. I was impressed with the way he stayed a total iceman during all the personal attacks. A couple of his responses were hilarious.
As to this surreal forum of omniscient non-readers, anyone who claims that this book is just a shallow rehash of previous work or is full of crackpot ideas is LAUGHABLY mistaken. Many of my friends and colleagues are real, working physicists, in academia and the private sector, and not a single one would ever consider posting evaluations of another person’s work without a thorough, complete, and careful scrutiny of its contents. In other words, they would actually read it and understand it before talking about it. To do otherwise is just not good practice in any field, and a pretty good way of looking uninformed and foolish later on. Of course that’s the case with real reviews and real critics, not anonymous swipes on a forum, but one can hope that the level of this discussion might eventually mature a little. And no, I don’t work for Terence Witt. It will be interesting to see how long it takes bona fide reader #2 to show up. Since the name of this forum is “Null Physics anyone?” it would be nice to have some folks that actually know something about null physics on it. There’re plenty of other forums available for physics hobbyists to discuss the current paradigms.