Well, I missed tonight, but I have bookmarked it to look at.  Thanks.

________________________________
From: John <jr_...@yahoo.com>
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, November 1, 2011 10:52 PM
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Stephen Hawking is wrong. You can't explain the 
universe without God | Mail Online


  
Judy,

Thanks for the heads up on this Nova episode.  I'm familiar with Brian Greene's 
work through the video clips available in YouTube.  He is very good at 
communicating to the general public complex ideas in physics into 
understandable language.  But he tends to be a dreamer in that he believes that 
there is a way to prove, through scientific observation, the existence of the 
Multiverse.

Nonetheless, I will be looking out for this show.

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "authfriend" <jstein@...> wrote:
>
> You guys might want to watch this series, which begins
> tomorrow (Wednesday) on Nova on PBS. The four hour-long
> episodes deal (in order) with space, time, the quantum
> world, and the realm of other universes. From the series
> Web site:
> 
> "The Fabric of the Cosmos," a four-hour series based on the book by renowned 
> physicist and author Brian Greene, takes us to the frontiers of physics to 
> see how scientists are piecing together the most complete picture yet of 
> space, time, and the universe. With each step, audiences will discover that 
> just beneath the surface of our everyday experience lies a world we'd hardly 
> recognize—a startling world far stranger and more wondrous than anyone 
> expected.
> 
> Brian Greene is going to let you in on a secret: We've all been deceived. Our 
> perceptions of time and space have led us astray. Much of what we thought we 
> knew about our universe—that the past has already happened and the future is 
> yet to be, that space is just an empty void, that our universe is the only 
> universe that exists—just might be wrong.
> 
> Interweaving provocative theories, experiments, and stories with 
> crystal-clear explanations and imaginative metaphors like those that defined 
> the groundbreaking and highly acclaimed series "The Elegant Universe," "The 
> Fabric of the Cosmos" aims to be the most compelling, visual, and 
> comprehensive picture of modern physics ever seen on television.
> 
> http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/physics/fabric-of-cosmos.html?gclid=CO7D7f26lKwCFYmI5godqywUrQ
> 
> http://tinyurl.com/3nbe3mj
>


 

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