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The Fabric of Reality

The Science of Parallel Universes - and Its Implications

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The Fabric of Reality

Auteur(s): David Deutsch
Narrateur(s): Walter Dixon
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À propos de cet audio

Author of the New York Times best seller The Beginning of Infinity, David Deutsch, explores the four most fundamental strands of human knowledge: quantum physics, and the theories of knowledge, computation, and evolution - and their unexpected connections. Taken together, these four strands reveal a deeply integrated, rational, and optimistic worldview. It describes a unified fabric of reality that is objective and comprehensible, in which human action and thought are central.

With new preface exclusive to the audiobook, read by the author.

©1997, 1998 David Deutsch (P)2018 David Deutsch
Astronomie et science de l’espace Physique Science Mathématiques Astronomie Informatique Cosmologie Technologie
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Great introduction! The topics are extensively dealt with.

I sure wish I knew more math.

Sniffin' sixty and feel like I've missed so much. But with retirement comes time.

lol. Time indeed.

Great introduction! The topics are extensively dea

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This narrative definitely adds many perspectives to your understanding of reality.
Some chapters need to be revisited for better understanding.

Deep discussion changing your views

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To start with:
I've learned to appreciate criticism.
I am sure, you're too: As a kid at home, at school, at university, at first jobs, you may hear it often.
For me, it wasn't always pleasant, but, in the end, it sharpened me (when the doze was right, and when I listed too it).
Then something shifted. People became too gentle - maybe it's a Canadian thing - and honest criticism became rare. Now, when I get even a small dose of it, I cherish it like a photon that actually makes it through all four slits without being lost in some shadow world of parallel universes full of unicorns.
Speaking of which: I just set myself to return an audiobook, even though Audible flagged it as "not eligible for return." The book is The Fabric of Reality by David Deutsch.
I'm not a physicist or a quantum-computing specialist like Deutsch (that is why I read it). But I can keep a logical thread going for a long time - maybe not 30 hours straight like the newest AI models, but I can hibernate it and resume later. When I see a crack in logic, I dig in. And now, with AI in my pocket, I can test reasoning and check facts on the fly.
For the past two days, I've been walking my dog, pausing the audiobook, rewinding, re-listening, and then querying AI on my phone. I open YouTube to rewatch the double-slit experiment - I learn about it at university and first time heard about it at school. I notice how many people don't really understand it; even scientists sometimes repeat bad explanations, whether from lack of teaching talent or misunderstanding the point themselves. YouTube is full of copy-pasted mistakes - a broken radio of bad metaphors.
So I asked myself: could the author of such an iconic book also be making a mistake?
 Chapter two became a showstopper for me - the part about "shadow photons" and Deutsch's leap to parallel universes. I started asking AI for critiques of that passage. Eventually, I found a public review that nailed exactly what I was thinking:
👉On Shadow Photons and Real Unicorns - Ron Garret (2009)
This critique struck me because it voiced my own unease about the sanity of that logic. If scientists can make such big leaps and their books still sell for decades - not even shelved as science fiction - what does that say about our collective standards? Honestly, The Fabric of Reality might belong on the same shelf as Nine Princes in Amber.
And yet, on a positive note, I like Nine Princes in Amber. It's a fantastic book, and yes, it has the unicorn - right where it belongs, naturally woven into the fantasy. I even envy those who haven't read it yet. But only about 50% of the book stays in sane fantasy; then it slips into cheap madness - coherence suffers. Deutsch managed to go off the rails by chapter 2, and by chapter 4 it was already too late. IMHO: No need to be physicists to see it.
I do understand why books like this get 4.14 stars on Goodreads. For the general public, it's seductive (assuming the public has any understanding of reality to begin with). Those leaps of belief to the world of unicorns are exactly why we need criticism - honest, sharp criticism.
As for me, I'll keep holding on to the universe we're in, aiming for the right mix of deep and REM sleep - making sure no shadow worlds swallow me.

Shadow Photons, Unicorns: Lost Art of Criticism

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