View from the lurkers gallery
I Googeloped over to this thread after doing a couble-take to the NullPhysics add in Discover Magazine yesterday. Ironically, it's the one with Einstein on the cover (Herr Doktor Einstein the patent clerk, not Fred Einstein the mail clerk), so I was in the mood to see if perhaps the second coming had finally came. When I saw James Randi on the banner of this site I knew THAT wasn't going to happen; rather, I was in for some good old-fashioned debunking.
I read this whole thread, understood the majority of the sentences without numbers or coefficients (and took the others on faith), and must say, as a casual Googeloper into this forum, you guys do not disappoint. I laughed, I cried (well, I stayed up to late and my eyes started watering from some strain), it MOVED me. Monty-Python references interspersed with gluons, leptons, and peons... what's not to love?
Although I am utterly unqualified to judge outcomes based upon the scientific arguments, the rhetorical quality has been pretty lopsided. With the of Mr. Witt himself, who left all his chips on the table when he retired from the game (with the grace of the gifted marketer he seems to be, I should interject), no one else has shown any kind of hand.
My qualification is in word-logic, not numbers-logic. Curiosity draws me to the sciences, but because unlike the Einsteins of the world Attention Deficit Disorder reduces me to a dilettante because it is not paired with mathematical intuition (so, naturally, I am a lawyer.) I often fantasize about stumbling upon a philosophical paradigm that supplants the bizzaro-world of quantum physics, which seems to describe a universe appart from the one I navigate. Unlike some people, however, this fantasy does not animate my life (so far...)
My experience with this sort of thing is in confronting Holocaust-deniers years ago on the old alt.revisionism newsgroup (where my sometimes formidable but usually evil opponents eroded my soul), and more recently debating evolution-Deniers on the web (where my sometimes kind-hearted but always soft-minded opponents eroded my intellect). The one thing I can say that distinguishes this Null Physics thread from those I've participated in is that the denier-sites usually had someone from 'the other side' capable of carrying their torch. That does not appear to be the case here.
Unfortunately, with the exception of Mr. Witt himself, even those who claim to have read the book do not seem able to mount any kind of defense against the compelling criticism several of you posed. And - NO - the "you-cannot-comment-until-you-read-the-whole-thing" argument is no defense: one need not devour the whole turkey to know it's been undercooked; the first bite'll usually do (and probably better spat out than spend the night on the John.) It's worth noting, too, that this argument is a favorite of Creationists who - with no sense of irony - often charged that I have not studied the entire Bible sufficient to crticize particular doctrinal elements derived from it, while they themselves faithfully parroted false criticisms of Biology, Geology, Physics (woo-hoo!) and various other scientific disciplines to which they remained wilfully (and proudly!) ignorant.
To add my piece to this forum (as one of the popular science consumers the targeted by "Null Physics" book), I offer the following brief observations, and my apologies that these may borrow or outright steal from the comments of others:
- Mr. Witt's apparent fluence in the language of physics neither credits nor discredits him; but speaking Latin is not what qualified Martin Luther to pin his manifesto to the cathedral door.
- If Mr. Witt's revolutionary paradigm is an outgrowth of science (as opposed to, say, theology), then how can his theory purport to answer the ultimate "why?" of the universe, while leaving the so many lowly "how?" details to be filled-in later? (His answer to this, of course, was 'pay-your-money-and-read-the-book,' yet he offers not so much as a scientific abstract let alone a detailed synopsis of his theory.)
- The preface of his book is provided at his website. It begins with a quote from Galileo Galilei: "In questions of science the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of a single individual." If the 5 pages of prefaratory apologia following this quote portend the humility of Mr. Witt's scientific reasoning, then he does not understand the true implications of Galileo's words.
- If Mr. Witt's commitment is truly to science (in contrast to, say, commerce), then marketing an over-priced tome to popular science consumers (in contrast to, say, sending free copies to the popular science commentators such as the knowledgable critics on this forum) is at best a hopeless blunder.
- Mr. Witt is going to soon discover that although we consumers of popular science are attracted to radical new ideas and expect the next Einstein to arrive during our lifetime, most of us do know the difference between peer review and literary review. And we certainly are aware that charlattans are master marketers first and foremost.
I do hope that a competent defender of Null Physics shows up soon. It would be a shame to let the critical power I've witnessed here languish.