or
more
than two centuries after Newton published his theories of
space, time, and motion in 1687, most physicists were
Newtonians. They believed, as Newton did, that space and
time are absolute, that force causes acceleration, and that
gravity is a force conveyed across a vacuum at a distance.
Since Darwin there are few professional biologists who are
not Darwinians, and if most psychologists no longer often
call themselves Freudians, few doubt that there is an
unconscious or that sexuality plays a big role in it. So as
we celebrate the 100th anniversary of Einstein’s great
discoveries, the question arises: How many professional
physicists are Einsteinians?
The
superficial answer is that we all are. No professional
physicist today doubts that quantum theory and relativity
theory have stood up to experimental tests. But the term
“Einsteinian” does not exist. I’ve never heard or read it.
Nor have I ever encountered any evidence for a “school of
Einstein.” There is a community of people scattered around
the world who call themselves relativists, whose main
scientific work centers on general relativity. But
relativists make up only a tiny minority of theoretical
physicists, and there is no country where they dominate the
intellectual atmosphere of the field.
Strange as it may seem, Albert Einstein, the discoverer of
both quantum and relativity theory, and hence clearly the
preeminent physicist of the modern era, failed to leave
behind a following with any appreciable influence. Why most
physicists followed other leaders in directions Einstein
opposed is a story that must be told if this centennial year
is to be other than an empty celebration of a myth,
unconnected to the reality of who Einstein was and what he
believed in.
Physicists I’ve met
who knew Einstein told me they found his thinking slow
compared to the stars of the day. While he was competent
enough with the basic mathematical tools of physics, many
other physicists surrounding him in Berlin and Princeton
were better at it. So what accounted for his genius? In
retrospect, I believe what allowed Einstein to achieve so
much was primarily a moral quality. He simply cared far
more than most of his colleagues that the laws of physics
have to explain everything in nature coherently and
consistently. As a result he was acutely sensitive to flaws
and contradictions in the logical structure of physical
theories.
Einstein’s ability to see flaws and his fierce refusal to
compromise had real repercussions. His professors did not
support him in his search for an academic job and he was
unemployed until he found work as a patent inspector. The
problem was not just that he skipped classes. He saw right
through his elders’ complacent acceptance of Newtonian
physics. The young Einstein was obsessed with logical flaws
that were glaringly obvious, but only to him. While the
great English physicist Lord Rayleigh said he saw “only a
few clouds on the horizon” remaining to be understood, the
16-year-old Einstein wondered what would happen to his image
in a mirror if he traveled faster than the speed of light.
Einstein’s single goal in science was to discover what he
called theories of principle. These are theories that
postulate general rules that all phenomena must satisfy. If
such a theory is true, it must apply universally. In his
study of physics he identified two existing theories of
principle: the laws of motion set out by Galileo and Newton,
and thermodynamics. The basic principle of the first is the
relativity of uniform motion, that the speed of your own
motion is impossible to detect. Einstein’s discovery of
special relativity came from 10 years of meditation on how
to reconcile the relativity of motion with James Clerk
Maxwell’s theory of electromagnetism, which describes the
propagation of light.
While he mused about
electromagnetism, Einstein made thermodynamics the focus of
his early work. He began by following the Austrian physicist
Ludwig Boltzmann who argued that the laws of thermodynamics
could be derived from applying statistics to the motion of
atoms. This view was unpopular at the time because many
influential professors did not believe matter was made of
atoms. They instead believed matter was continuous.
Einstein’s work led to his demonstration in 1905 that
Brownian motion—the continuous, jerky movements of pollen
grains or other tiny objects immersed in liquid—offered a
proof of the existence of atoms.
At the
same time, Einstein applied Boltzmann’s approach to
thermodynamics to electrodynamics. This led to his discovery
of the photon, a discrete packet of electromagnetic energy,
and to the realization that such a packet must be both a
wave and a particle. Although Einstein was thus the
discoverer of quantum phenomena, he became in time the main
opponent of the theory of quantum mechanics. By his own
account, he spent far more time thinking about quantum
theory than he did about relativity. But he never found a
theory of quantum physics that satisfied him.
There
are by now only a small minority of physicists who think
Einstein was right to reject quantum theory as the
foundation of our understanding of nature. No theory has
been more successful at explaining a vast array of
experimental data. It is the basis for our understanding of
virtually all of physics, with the possible exception of
gravity and cosmology. Einstein was willing to concede that
quantum mechanics explains the recorded behavior of the
subatomic world, but he was convinced it had two flaws.
First, it fails to give precise predictions for the outcomes
of individual processes. Instead, it gives only statistical
predictions. To check them, one must do an experiment many
times and compare the resulting distributions of outcomes
with the predictions of the theory. Second, quantum theory
fails to give an objective picture of the world that is
unconnected to our role as observers. The formulas of
quantum theory correspond to our actions preparing
experiments and measuring their outcomes. Einstein objected
to this because he believed strongly that physics should
provide a picture of nature “as it is in itself.”
After
1930, virtually all of Einstein’s colleagues were certain
the revolution was over and that physics was nearly
complete. Nearly alone in his stance, Einstein saw the
quantum as only a stepping stone to the real thing, which he
searched for the rest of his life. Quantum theory was not
the only theory that bothered Einstein. Few people have
appreciated how dissatisfied he was with his own theories of
relativity. Special relativity grew out of Einstein’s
insight that the laws of electromagnetism cannot depend on
relative motion and that the speed of light therefore must
be always the same, no matter how the source or the observer
moves. Among the consequences of that theory are that
energy and mass are equivalent (the now-legendary
relationship E = mc2) and that time and distance
are relative, not absolute. Special relativity was the
result of 10 years of intellectual struggle, yet Einstein
had convinced himself it was wrong within two years of
publishing it. He rejected his theory, even before most
physicists had come to accept it, for reasons that only he
cared about. For another 10 years, as the world of physics
slowly absorbed special relativity, Einstein pursued a
lonely path away from it.
Why?
The main reason was that he wanted to extend relativity to
include all observers, whereas his special theory postulates
only an equivalence among a limited class of observers—those
who aren’t accelerating. A second reason was to
incorporate gravity, making use of a new principle he called
the equivalence principle. This postulates that observers
can never distinguish the effects of gravity from those of
acceleration so long as they observe phenomena only in their
immediate neighborhood. By this principle he linked the
problem of gravity with the problem of extending relativity
to all observers.
Einstein was the only one who worried about these two
problems. Meanwhile, other physicists came up with ways to
incorporate gravitational phenomena directly into special
relativity. This was the reasonable thing to do, for they
were building directly on the success of the new theory
Einstein had invented. And they succeeded in making the
theory consistent. Moreover, their extensions of special
relativity agreed with all experiments that had been done.
So why did Einstein reject it? His reason was that his
colleagues’ approach—incorporating gravity into special
relativity rather than crafting a whole new theory—disagreed
with his equivalence principle. Einstein understood quickly
that there was a key experiment that could distinguish
between the incremental approach of the other physicists and
his own, radical approach. This was to measure the bending
of light by the sun’s gravity, an effect predicted by the
equivalence principle. A reasonable person might have waited
to see how the experiment came out, and indeed, an
opportunity to test the theory came in 1919. By that time
Einstein had invented his second theory of relativity, which
he called general relativity. The experiment appeared to
confirm the new theory’s predictions. The result was
announced on the front pages of the world’s newspapers,
making Einstein the first scientist to be a star.
General relativity is the most radical and challenging of
Einstein’s discoveries—so much so that I believe the
majority of physicists, even theoretical physicists, have
yet to fully incorporate it into their thinking. The flashy
stuff, like black holes, gravitational waves, the expanding
universe, and the Big Bang are, it turns out, the easy parts
of general relativity. The theory goes much deeper: It
demands a radical change in how we think of space and time.
All
previous theories said that space and time have a fixed
structure and that it is this structure that gives rise to
the properties of things in the world, by giving every
object a place and every event a time. In the transition
from Aristotle to Newton to special relativity, that
structure changed, but in each case the structure remained
fixed. We and everything that we observe live in a
space-time, with fixed and unchanging properties. That is
the stage on which we play, but nothing we do or could do
affects the structure of space and time themselves.
General relativity is not about adding to those structures.
It is not even about substituting those structures for a
list of possible new structures. It rejects the whole idea
that space and time are fixed at all. Instead, in general
relativity the properties of space and time evolve
dynamically in interaction with everything they contain.
Furthermore, the essence of space and time now are just a
set of relationships between events that take place in the
history of the world. It is sufficient, it turns out, to
speak only of two kinds of relationships: how events are
related to each other causally (the order in which they
unfold) and how many events are contained within a given
interval of time, measured by a standard clock (how quickly
they unfold relative to each other).
Thus,
in general relativity there is no fixed framework, no stage
on which the world plays itself out. There is only an
evolving network of relationships, making up the history of
space, time, and matter. All the previous theories described
space and time as fixed backgrounds on which things happen.
The point of general relativity is that there is no
background.
This point is subtle
and elusive. I was very fortunate to know the great
astrophysicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar during his last
years. Chandra, as we called him, was the first to discover
that general relativity implied that stars above a certain
mass would collapse into what we now call a black hole. Much
later, he wrote a beautiful book describing the different
solutions of the equations of general relativity that
describe black holes. As I got to know him, Chandra shocked
me by speaking of a deep anger toward Einstein. Chandra was
upset that Einstein, after inventing general relativity, had
abandoned this masterpiece, leaving it to others to struggle
through it.
I now
believe that Chandra partly missed the point, and he
is certainly not alone. The deepest point of general
relativity is not that the universe may expand or that there
are black holes. To think this way is to believe that
general relativity is just another step in the progression
of Aristotle to Newton to special relativity. Chandra, in
his interest in the solutions of the theory, was, I
fear––like so many others—reaching for a beautiful flower
but missing the beauty of how it is that flowers come to be.
But Chandra was right that in spite of the great triumph
general relativity represented, Einstein did not linger long
over it. For Einstein, quantum physics was the essential
mystery, and nothing could be really fundamental that was
not part of the solution to that problem. As general
relativity didn’t explain quantum theory, it had to be
provisional as well. It could only be a step towards
Einstein’s goal, which was to find a theory of quantum
phenomena that would agree with all the experiments,
but satisfy his demand for clarity and completeness.
Einstein imagined for a time that such a theory could come
from an extension of general relativity. Thus he entered
into the final period of his scientific life, his search for
a unified field theory. He sought an extension of general
relativity that would incorporate electromagnetism, thereby
wedding the large-scale world where gravity dominates with
the small-scale world of quantum physics. He tried a variety
of means such as adding new dimensions of space-time or
loosening somewhat the mathematical structure of general
relativity. The irony is that some of these gambits worked,
but they still led nowhere. For it turns out, that unified
theories are a dime a dozen. There are many ways to
generalize general relativity so as to incorporate the laws
of electromagnetism. Nor is it much harder, as has been done
recently, to extend the theory a bit further to incorporate
nuclear forces, and so have a unified theory of all the
forces.
Indeed, the number of such unified theories keeps
increasing. Recent estimates based on results from string
theory indicate there are more than 10100
distinct unified field theories. Thus, it is as unclear now
as it was for Einstein whether pursuing a unified field
theory will lead to real progress in understanding nature.
One way to understand
this story is to say that theoretical physics has finally
caught up to Einstein. While he was shunned in his Princeton
years as he pursued the unified field theory, the Institute
for Advanced Study where he worked is now filled with
theorists who search for new variants of unified field
theories. It is indeed a vindication of sorts for Einstein
because much of what today’s string theorists do in practice
is play with unified theories of the kinds that Einstein and
his few colleagues invented.
The
problem with this picture is that by the end of his life
Einstein had to some extent abandoned his search for a
unified field theory. He had failed to find a version of the
theory that did what was most important to him, which is to
explain quantum phenomena in a way that involved neither
measurements nor statistics. In his last years he was moving
on to something even more radical. He proposed to give up
the idea that space and time are continuous. It is fair to
say that while the idea that matter is made of atoms goes
back at least to the Greeks, few before Einstein questioned
the smoothness and continuity of space and time. To one
friend, Walter Dallenbäch, he wrote, “The problem seems to
me how one can formulate statements about a discontinuum
without calling on a continuum as an aid; the latter should
be banned from the theory as a supplementary construction
not justified by the essence of the problem, which
corresponds to nothing ‘real.’ ”
However, Einstein
made no progress with this new direction. He complained
that, “we still lack the mathematical structure,
unfortunately.” To another friend, H. S. Joachim, he wrote:
“It would be especially difficult to derive something like a
spatio-temporal quasi-order from such a schema. I cannot
imagine how the axiomatic framework of such a physics would
appear, and I don’t like it when one talks about it in dark
apostrophes. But I hold it entirely possible that the
development will lead there.”
So
what is Einstein’s real legacy? Are any of us his followers?
In this centennial year, there will be many who claim the
mantle. That includes the community of relativists, but many
of them rarely look beyond the theory. Instead they
study it by finding solutions on computers or by looking for
gravity waves. There are also a few physicists who follow
Einstein in rejecting quantum theory and in searching for an
alternative. Einstein would have been happy that some
scientists agree with him, but he likely would have been
critical that most work in that area ignores the problem of
unification.
Some string theorists
will claim to be Einsteinians, and certainly Einstein would
have approved of their search for a unification of physics.
But here is how Brian Greene, in his last book, describes
the state of the field: “Even today, more than three decades
after its initial articulation, most string practitioners
believe we still don’t have a comprehensive answer to the
rudimentary question, What is string theory? . . . Most
researchers feel that our current formulation of string
theory still lacks the kind of core principle we find at the
heart of other major advances.”
Einstein’s whole life was a search for a theory of
principles. It is hard to imagine he would have sustained
interest in a theory for which, after more than 30 years of
intensive investigation, no one is able to put forward any
core principles.
He may
in this regard have been happier with approaches to quantum
gravity that stay closer to the core principles of
relativity. For example, loop quantum gravity preserves his
discovery that space and time have no fixed background, and
it also provides an answer to Einstein’s questions of how to
go beyond the continuum. But Einstein would have found
unacceptable all approaches to quantum gravity that take
quantum mechanics as fundamental, including string theory
and loop quantum gravity. Einstein never wavered from his
rejection of quantum mechanics. His motive for making a
unified field theory was not to extend the domain of quantum
mechanics; it was rather to find an alternative to quantum
mechanics. No research program that accepts quantum
mechanics as a given can count itself to be within
Einstein’s legacy.
I
think a sober assessment is that up until now, almost all of
us who work in theoretical physics have failed to live up to
Einstein’s legacy. His demand for a coherent theory of
principle was uncompromising. It has not been reached—not by
quantum theory, not by special or general relativity, not by
anything invented since. Einstein’s moral clarity, his
insistence that we should accept nothing less than a theory
that gives a completely coherent account of individual
phenomena, cannot be followed unless we reject almost all
contemporary theoretical physics as insufficient.
So is
it possible to follow the path of Einstein? To do so, you
cannot be a crank; you must be a well-trained professional
physicist, literate in current theories and aware of their
limitations, as he was. And you must insist on absolute
clarity in your own work, rather than follow any fad or
popular direction. Given the pressures of competition for
academic positions, to follow Einstein’s path is to risk the
price that he paid: unemployment in spite of abundant and
obvious talent and skill at the craft of theoretical
physics.
In my
whole career as a theoretical physicist, I have known only a
handful of colleagues of whom it can truly be said have
followed Einstein’s path. They are driven, as Einstein was,
by a moral need for clear understanding. In everything they
do, these few strive continually to invent a new theory of
principle that could satisfy the strictest demands of
coherence and consistency without regard to fashion or the
professional consequences. Most have paid for their
independence in a harder career path than equally talented
scientists who follow the research agendas of the big
professors.
Let us
be frank and admit that most of us have neither the courage
nor the patience to emulate Einstein. We should instead
honor Einstein by asking whether we can do anything to
ensure that in the future those few who do follow Einstein’s
path, those who approach science as uncompromisingly as he
did, have less risk of unemployment of the sort he suffered
at the beginning of his career and less risk of the
marginalization he endured at the end. If we can do this, if
we can make the path easier for those few who do follow him,
we may make possible a revolution in science that even
Einstein failed to achieve.
A
version of this article has previously appeared in the
science publication Discover, and is copyrighted by
Discover. No portion of this article may be used
without the explicit consent of Discover and the
author.
Lee Smolin, a theoretical physicist, is founding
member of and research at th Perimeter Institute, Waterloo,
Canada. Smolin is the author of many scientific and
general publications, including
The Life of the Cosmos and
Three Roads to Quantum Gravity.