“I like to say that physics is hard because physics is easy, by which I mean we actually think about physics as students.”
Physics seems complicated, until you realize why it works so well, says physicist Sean Carroll, revealing the basis of the field’s greatest successes: Radical simplicity.
Carroll takes us from Newton’s clockwork universe to Laplace’s demon, to Einstein’s spacetime revolution, exploring the historical shockwaves each breakthrough caused. If you’ve wondered how stripping the world down to its simplest parts can reveal deeper truths, this is where that story begins.
00:00:00 Radical simplicity in physics
00:00:55 Chapter 1: The physics of free will
00:04:55 Laplace’s Demon
00:06:27 The clockwork universe paradigm
00:07:41 Determinism and compatibilism
00:08:45 Chapter 2: The invention of spacetime
00:17:30: Einstein’s general theory of relativity
00:24:27 Chapter 3: The quantum revolution
00:28:05 The 2 biggest ideas in physics
00:32:27 Visualizing physics
00:38:17 Quantum field theory
00:46:51 The Higgs boson particle
00:47:28 The standard model of particle physics
00:52:53 The core theory of physics
01:02:03 The measurement problem
01:13:47 Chapter 4: The power of collective genius
01:16:19 A timeline of the theories of physics
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About Sean Carroll:
Dr. Sean Carroll is Homewood Professor of Natural Philosophy — in effect, a joint appointment between physics and philosophy — at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, and fractal faculty at the Santa Fe Institute. Most of his career has been spent doing research on cosmology, field theory, and gravitation, looking at topics such as dark matter and dark energy, modified gravity, topological defects, extra dimensions, and violations of fundamental symmetries. These days, his focus has shifted to more foundational questions, both in quantum mechanics (origin of probability, emergence of space and time) and statistical mechanics (entropy and the arrow of time, emergence and causation, dynamics of complexity), bringing a more philosophical dimension to his work.
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