Language and physics and cleanliness
The fact that the mathematics allows for gazillions of variations is seen to be evidence for gazillions of actual worlds.
This kind of reification of equations is precisely what strikes some
humanities scholars as childishly naive. At the very least, it raises
serious questions about the relationship between our mathematical models
of reality, and reality itself. While it is true that in the history of
physics many important discoveries have emerged from revelations
within equations — Paul Dirac’s formulation for antimatter being
perhaps the most famous example — one does not need to be a cultural
relativist to feel sceptical about the idea that the only way forward
now is to accept an infinite cosmic ‘landscape’ of universes that
embrace every conceivable version of world history, including those in
which the Middle Ages never ended or Hitler won.
In the 30 years since I was a student,
physicists’ interpretations of their field have increasingly tended
toward literalism, while the humanities have tilted towards
postmodernism. Thus a kind of stalemate has ensued. Neither side seems
inclined to contemplate more nuanced views. It is hard to see ways out
of this tunnel, but in the work of the late British anthropologist Mary
Douglas I believe we can find a tool for thinking about some of these
questions.
On the surface, Douglas’s great book Purity and Danger (1966) would seem to have nothing do with physics.
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