Gerard ‘t Hooft says quantum mechanics is nonsense

There was an interesting article in Scientific American a couple of weeks back. The title was Quantum Physics Is on the Wrong Track, Says Breakthrough Prize Winner Gerard ‘t Hooft. However the URL was breakthrough prize winner Gerard ‘t Hooft says quantum mechanics is nonsense. That has just got to be deliberate. Check it out for yourself. You usually have to pay to read online Scientific American articles, but I was able to read this article for free for a while. Then once my grace period was over, I was able to take out an initial digital subscription for a dollar. Good one Sci-Am. Anyway, the article is by Lee Billings, who interviewed Gerard ‘t Hooft after the latter was awarded the $3m Breakthrough prize on April 5th 2025. Here’s the interview* with remarks by me.

You’ve won practically all the big physics prizes

Billings: It seems you’ve won practically all the big physics prizes at this point.

‘t Hooft: Some are still missing! But, yeah, I’ve won quite a few prizes. What worries me a little bit is that most of them were for the same thing. You get prize after prize for something that has already been recognized as such, whereas I’ve done other things in science that are not as well known – not by the general public, at least. But anyway, the Breakthrough Foundation has made a summary of my work for which they gave this prize, and that contains practically all I have done!

Detective: I’ll write about physics prizes sometime.

Is it still exciting?

Billings: Yes, the foundation included it all! But given how many prizes you have won, does this one feel like just another notch on your belt? Has this all become routine for you, or is it still exciting?

‘t Hooft: I can assure you: nothing is routine. All these things are different. The climax really was the Nobel Prize itself, which is only granted to a very few people every year. And that’s something very special. But this one is also very special. It’s a big prize, literally speaking.

Detective: as above.

Work in the 1970s with Veltman to explain the electroweak interaction

Billings: And as you mentioned, this one recognizes the full sweep of your scientific career rather than just one facet of it, such as your work in the 1970s with Veltman to explain the electroweak interaction that led to you both sharing the 1999 Nobel Prize in Physics. That work, of course, was fundamental to the subsequent formulation of the Standard Model of particle physics, now celebrated as the most well tested and successful scientific theory ever devised. But in some respects, the Standard Model has become notorious, too, because its many myriad experimental validations have contributed to a crisis in particle physics wherein progress has slowed down as researchers have seen no obvious path forward to further breakthroughs. Does this aspect of the Standard Model’s decades-long dominance worry you?

‘t Hooft: No, not at all. I think it is natural for science that we cannot always have an infinitely continuous stream of discoveries and new insights. There will be periods, like the one we are in now in particle physics, where things seem to be quieter. I just saw the news from CERN, for instance, that at the Large Hadron Collider, they’ve detected in new channels the absence of CP [charge parity] symmetry. This is a very important finding but not an earth-shattering one. It seems that we’re in a period where scientists in my field make many smaller discoveries that, in themselves, are very pleasing because they make our understanding more complete. But I think history shows it won’t be always like this. There will be more fundamental findings that, again, will change our views on what is going on.

Detective: I think we’ve had no true particle physics discoveries or insights for decades. I think the current quiet period is actually an impasse. I think particle physics has hit the buffers because particle physicists have dug themselves into a hole trying to bolster the Standard Model. I think this is wrong on multiple counts.

‘t Hooft: A few centuries ago, when [James Clerk] Maxwell joined electricity and magnetism, and after that, when Max Planck made the first observations about energy being quantized, there were long periods in which very little seemed to be happening. In reality, of course, many things did happen in other fields, such as statistical physics and other fundamental branches of science. And both then and now, there’s been steady progress in those domains. Look at astronomy right now; the astronomers have their great moments all the time, and you can’t say there’s a dull moment at all! They’re discovering many new things in the universe as their telescopes become bigger and more accurate and as they use more and more fundamental scientific techniques to enhance their resolution. You can say much the same thing about biophysics or medicine, where discoveries are made nearly every day.

Detective: I agree that astronomy is doing fine, as is biophysics and medicine. However I would say that fundamental physics is not doing fine, and that the reasons for this can be traced all the way back to the 1920s. That’s when the quantum realists talked about the electron as a wave in a closed path, but the Copenhagen School adopted Frenkel’s point-particle electron. This led to the problem of infinities in the 1930s when quantum electrodynamics was thought to be a failed theory. Then interest switched to neutron science, then the Nazis disrupted European physics. Then came the nuclear bomb, which resulted in the popularity of physicists like Feynman. He and others used renormalisation to resurrect QED, even though this was the wrong fix. Then Gell-Mann came up with the eight-fold way, and theorists and experimentalists conspired to predict and discover a whole zoo of ephemeral particles to generate headlines and secure funding. I’ll write a brief history sometime.

‘t Hooft: But in my field, you’re right, it seems to be that nothing is happening. I don’t agree with that, though. Things are happening, just at a more modest scale.

Detective: I would agree that things are happening, but not at places like CERN, and not in Physical Review D. I think things are happening because younger physicists are realising that the Standard Model is lacking because it doesn’t include gravity and doesn’t explain how a magnet works.

Are you optimistic that we’ll see a resurgence in big particle physics discoveries?

Billings: Are you optimistic, then, that this situation will change, and we’ll see a resurgence in big particle physics discoveries?

‘t Hooft: That’s a very good question because it looks as if there’s nothing we can do. If the situation proceeds in such a way that every new breakthrough requires a 10-fold, or even larger, increase in the machines’ size, power and costs, then clearly we won’t get much beyond where we are now. I cannot exclude such obstacles standing in the way of progress, but the history of science suggests, in such a case, progress will simply go in different directions. One may not only think of precision improvements but also [think of] totally different avenues of discovery such as cosmology and black hole physics.

Detective: I think that those totally different avenues of discovery will be in particle physics. Such as the discovery that the electron is a trivial-knot photon, that charge is topological, that mass is a measure of energy content, and much more. None of this needs a new collider.

‘t Hooft: I would like to advise to the new generation of scientists: don’t worry about that, because the real reason why there’s nothing new coming is that everybody’s thinking the same way!

Detective: I would like to advise that there’s been nothing new coming because journals like Nature won’t print an electron paper if it challenges the mainstream narrative.

‘t Hooft: I’m a bit puzzled and disappointed about this. Many people continue to think the same way – and the way people now try to introduce new theories doesn’t seem to work as well. We have lots of new theories about quantum gravity, about statistical physics, about the universe and cosmology, but they’re not really “new” in their basic structure. People don’t seem to want to make the daring new steps that I think are really necessary. For instance, we see everybody sending their new ideas first to the [preprint server] arXiv.org and then to the journals to have it published. And in arXiv.org, you see thousands of papers coming every year, and none of them really has this great, bright, new, fine kind of insight that changes things. There are insights, of course, but not the ones that are needed to make a basic new breakthrough in our field.

Detective: my understanding that the arXiv practices censorship too. If anybody would like to help me test that, I’d be pleased to see how things pan out.

‘t Hooft: I think we have to start thinking in a different way. And I have always had the attitude that I was thinking in a different way. And particularly in the 1970s, there was a very efficient way of making further progress: think differently from what your friends are doing, and then you find something new!

Detective: I won’t comment today on ‘t Hooft’s work. What’s important is what he’s saying about quantum mechanics.

‘t Hooft: I think that is still true; however, I’m getting old now and am no longer getting brilliant new ideas every week. But in principle, there are ways – one could argue about quantum mechanics, about cosmology, about biology – that are not the conventional ways of looking at things. And to my mind, people think in ways that are not novel enough.

Detective: I think people are thinking in novel ways, but struggle to get published.

Everything should be much more logical

Billings: Could you give an example of the novelty or difference you’re referring to?

‘t Hooft: Sure. My way of thinking about the world, about physics, about the other disciplines related to physics is that everything should be much more logical, much more direct, much more “down to Earth.”

Detective: I absolutely agree.

‘t Hooft: Many people who write papers on quantum mechanics like to keep some sense of mysticism about it, as if there’s something strange, something almost religious about the subject. I think that’s totally false. Quantum mechanics is based on a mathematical method used to describe very ordinary physical effects. I think the physical world itself is a very ordinary one that is completely classical. But in this completely classical world, there are still too many things that we don’t know today, there are “steps” we’re basically missing on our path to deeper understanding.

Detective: I agree with the first part of this. I think the physical world is a very ordinary one that is completely classical. However I don’t agree with the second part. I think there are many things we know today, and we are not missing steps on our path to a deeper understanding. I think these things are there, in the evidence, in the papers, but it’s difficult to disseminate them.

What sort of steps?

Billings: What sorts of steps?

‘t Hooft: I’m talking about steps that would exploit the fact that the whole world is very simple and straightforward. The trouble is, the world still appears complicated to us now, which is why we’re in this situation.

Detective: start by appreciating what Einstein said: space is primary, a field is a state of space, and a gravitational field is a place where space is “neither homogeneous nor isotropic”. Then take on board what Maxwell and Minkowski said about the screw nature of electromagnetism. Then take it one step at a time: understanding the photon, how pair production works, the electron, why charged particles attract and repel, and so on.

‘t Hooft: You already mentioned the Standard Model, this marvelous discovery from the previous century. It’s an instructive example because, basically, it’s very simple, but if you look at it deeper, you see there’s something very important missing. The Standard Model is based on quantum mechanics, and quantum mechanics tells you what happens when particles approach one another and scatter. But they can scatter in many different ways; they have a large number of choices of ways in which they scatter against each other, and the Standard Model doesn’t give any sound prediction there. It only gives you statistics. The Standard Model is a fantastic theory that handles the statistics of what things are doing. But the theory never tells you with infinite precision which choice nature makes; it only tells you that these different possibilities are there at a certain probability amplitude. That is the world as we know it. That’s how we know how to phrase the laws of nature. But it’s not the laws of nature themselves.

Detective: The Standard Model doesn’t explain why particles move the way that they do. It employs what Cathryn Carson called the peculiar notion of exchange forces. The exchange-particle idea worked its way into QED from the mid-1930s, even though Heisenberg used a neutron model that was later retracted. It’s now used throughout the Standard Model, and is wrong.

‘t Hooft: What’s missing is our understanding as to what it is that sometimes makes a particle go this way, sometimes that way. Well, you can easily argue particles can hit each other at a tiny distance. They don’t hit each other directly head-on but hit at some angle, and then they scatter away from some angle. That may be true. But what the theory today is not saying is what I should actually be looking at if two particles approach each other to predict how they’ll scatter ahead of time.

Detective: it’s there in what Maxwell and Minkowski called the screw nature of electromagnetism, which features a form of frame-dragging as per gravitomagnetism. Combine this with the Einstein and de Haas effect wherein spin is real, and a spinor does what it says on the can. Then you can reason that charged particles attract and repel like counter-rotating and co-rotating vortices, and that Thomson and Tait were ahead of their time.

‘t Hooft: Imagine if you knew the way such interactions would go as precisely as you could know what will happen when two grand pianos hit each other. In principle, for the pianos, you could say exactly which wire will hit each other wire; you could predict exactly what happens when two grand pianos collide. Could it be the same with particles? In practice, such predictions for particles are considered to be too hard, and you turn to statistics, and you conclude that your piano particles can scatter in all directions, and that’s all there is to be said. Well, for looking at pianos, maybe you can say something more. If you know exactly where and at which angle they will hit each other, you can predict ahead of time how they will scatter. And that should be in our theories of the elementary particles as well – and it isn’t.

Detective: see above, and try tornadoes instead of pianos. There are clues in particle decays and in TQFT. Find a picture of a trefoil and trace round it anticlockwise from the bottom left calling out the crossing-over directions: up down up. Now what does that remind you of?

‘t Hooft: I’m saying we should start to think in these ways. And people refuse that because they think quantum mechanics is too beautiful to be wrong. Whereas I believe that quantum mechanics is not the right way of ultimately saying what basic laws objects obey when they hit each other.

Detective: I agree wholeheartedly with that.

Nonlocality would be a disaster for most solid scientific theories

Billings: Incidentally, while I was preparing for this interview, I found a conversation you had in 2013 with one of my predecessors here at Scientific American, George Musser. And one of the things you discussed was the work of physicist John Bell and its implications for the nature of reality. You said that you considered locality to “be an essential ingredient for any simple, ultimate law governing the universe.” It sounds like that’s still your view.

‘t Hooft: Very much, absolutely. I think, in fact, that you can understand and explain quantum mechanics very well if you only assume that the laws are local laws. Let us say what these particles do when they collide is determined by where they are, at that very spot when they hit each other. That is, what happens at other spots in the universe, in principle, should not matter. And if it does matter, then you have what we call “nonlocality”. But nonlocality would be a disaster for most solid scientific theories!

Detective: I agree wholeheartedly with this too. Regular readers will be aware that I think that there is no quantum entanglement.

‘t Hooft: I don’t believe nonlocality is necessary. We don’t know exactly what to do when two particles collide because we don’t know whether particles look like grand pianos or like pure points. But, then again, they can’t be pure points because pure points can’t do anything. There’s something in there, and we should be able to write down all the laws on what’s in there, in these particles: How can they collide against each other? And why is it that they sometimes go this way and sometimes go that way? How can they exhibit spin?

Detective: We know that it’s the wave nature of matter, not the point-particle nature of matter. So we really ought to take note of what the quantum realists said about the electron being a wave in a closed path. That’s how they can exhibit spin. It isn’t difficult.

‘t Hooft: We should be able to phrase such things as solid laws, and we are not even close to that. And this is why I think other breakthroughs should still be possible – many of them! – to help us get closer to this level of understanding for particles that we simply don’t have today, not even as something approximate.

Detective: some of us do. Or should I say did. Williamson and van der Mark died trying to get Nature to print their papers.

Do you really think the problem is that we’re not asking the right questions?

Billings: You know, in my talks with theoretical physicists, I’ve noticed that the greater and more accomplished the individual is, the more likely they are to say, “The real challenge is not in answering old questions but rather in finding new, better questions for whatever problem you’re addressing.” I think that’s because there’s this temptation for optimism about what can be known – this feeling that by asking the “right” questions, meaningful answers must emerge. Do you really think the problem is that we’re not asking the right questions, or is it instead that we’ve been asking the right ones, and their answers are, against our hopes, simply beyond our reach?

‘t Hooft: What you just said, that the questions are beyond our reach, is exactly what people said a decade and a century and a millennium ago. And of course, that was the wrong answer each time. We can answer these questions, but to do so requires lots and lots of science. Before Maxwell, nobody understood how exactly electric and magnetic fields hang together, and they thought, “Oh, this is impossible to find out because it’s weird!” But then Maxwell said, no, you just need this one term, and then it all straightens out! And now we understand exactly what electric and magnetic interactions do. It’s simply not correct that you cannot answer such questions. No, you can, but you have to start from the beginning, like I said about quantum mechanics.

Detective: I agree with the sense of this, but I’m surprised to see ‘t Hooft talking about electric and magnetic fields instead of the electromagnetic field. It’s as if nobody has actually started at the beginning and read what Maxwell said.

‘t Hooft: If you believe right from the beginning that quantum mechanics is a theory that only gives you statistical answers and never anything better than that, then I think you’re on the wrong track. And people refuse to drop the idea that quantum mechanics is some strange sort of supernatural feature of the particles that we will never understand. No! We will understand, but we need to step backward first, and that’s always my message in science in general: before you understand something, just take a few steps back. Maybe you have to make a big march back, all the way back to the beginning.

Detective: I think ‘t Hooft is spot on with this.

‘t Hooft: Just imagine: What would your basic laws possibly be if you didn’t have quantum mechanics? Answering that, of course, requires saying what quantum mechanics is.

Detective: I imagine your basic laws would start with space and waves running through it. They would then cover the photon-photon interaction, which is missing from quantum electrodynamics.

What is quantum mechanics?

Billings: Okay. So what is quantum mechanics?

‘t Hooft: Quantum mechanics is the possibility that you can consider superpositions of states. That’s really all there is to it. And I’d argue that superpositions of states are not real. If you look very carefully, things never superimpose. [Erwin] Schrödinger asked the right questions here: You know, take my cat, it can be dead; it can be alive. Can it be in a superposition? That’s nonsense!

Detective: I agree with this. Poor old Schrödinger used his cat to show that the Copenhagen interpretation was nonsense, but it’s been hijacked by the quantum mystics who now use it to say quantum mechanics is weird.

‘t Hooft: And he was quite right. People shouldn’t continue to insist that a dead cat and a live cat superimpose. That’s complete nonsense – yet, at that level, it seems to be the only correct answer to say exactly where the particle is, what its velocity is, what its spin is, and so on. Whereas there must be different kinds of variables that evolve in time, such as integer-valued variables or discretely moving variables, to name just two possibilities. These would be variables in terms of which you can’t move a cat, you can’t say whether it’s dead or alive, unless you would make more nonlocal changes. There must be ways to describe all states for alive cats and for dead cats, but these states will mix with states that don’t describe cats at all.

Detective: I agree again. When I first saw this article (thanks again Steve) I didn’t think I’d be agreeing with ‘t Hooft, but I am.

‘t Hooft: Using superpositions is then just a trick that works at first but doesn’t get at the states we want to understand. We have to make that step backward.

Detective: I agreed yet again. I do so love what Bert Schroer said: “Perhaps the past, if looked upon with care and hindsight, may teach us where we possibly took a wrong turn”. How right he was. The old papers are a treasure trove full of low-hanging fruit.

How does that square with the ongoing success of quantum information science and quantum computing?

Billings: Walk me through this for a moment. If superpositions are illusory in that they are purely mathematical concepts that have no basis in physical reality, how does that square with the ongoing success of quantum information science and quantum computing, where it seems as if superpositions are a real physical phenomenon that can be leveraged, for instance, to do things that can’t be done classically?

‘t Hooft: Well, I think quantum technology is just what you get if you assume the reality of superimposed systems. What do I mean by that? We know superpositions in the macroscopic world are nonsense. That’s clear. And I believe, in the microscopic world, it’s clearly nonsense, too, even though it may seem we have nothing besides superpositions to use for understanding atoms. And I think what people in quantum technology probably don’t realize is that they’re doing the very converse of what they think they are doing. They think they’re understanding quantum mechanics. Instead I think what they should be doing is trying to remove the quantum mechanics from the description, trying to use more fundamental degrees of freedom, like those discrete states I mentioned.

Detective: ‘t Hooft could find himself in bother here. If there is no quantum entanglement, then the ongoing success of quantum information science and quantum computing is illusory.

‘t Hooft: They’re not asking the right questions, and that failure to do so makes things look more and more complicated – more and more quantum-mechanical – whereas, in reality, it shouldn’t be interpreted that way.

Detective: the right question is “How can cascade photons emitted 5 nanoseconds apart even be entangled?” And “Why does cos² θ feature when photons go through two polarizers like this → → as per Malus’s Law, or like this ← → as per a Bell test?

Quantum computers

Billings: Weren’t we just discussing the tendency of eminent theorists to talk about not asking the right questions?

‘t Hooft: Well, let me say that, yes, they do the right experiments. Yes, they try to make the right things. And yes, their quantum computers may be more powerful than anything else for certain applications because they understand “quantum mechanics” – by which I mean they understand how these microscopic systems actually act, in great detail, because this is something that actually came out of studying the quantum world. Yes, we know how small objects react and interact. But our problem is that, at present, we can only make statistical predictions. And as soon as a quantum computer gives you statistical distributions instead of correct answers, well, that’s the end of your “computer”; you can’t use it for most applications anymore.

Detective: Yet again I agree with ‘t Hooft, and then some. Here’s a little article that gives my own opinions on the subject: quantum computing and the quantum quacks.

‘t Hooft: For most things, you want to use a computer in such a way that you avoid making superpositions – because you want to get a sharp answer. For instance, you want to decipher a secret code or something like that. You want to have the exact answer: “This is what it means, not that!” And let’s not equate this answer to a superposition of those two possibilities – again, that’s nonsense.

Detective: I think it’s nonsense too. I also think quantum entanglement is scientific fraud.

‘t Hooft: What I’m saying is: we must unwind quantum mechanics, so to speak, as to see what happens underneath. And until the quantum technologists start doing that, I believe they won’t make really big progress. For instance, quantum computers always make errors, and their designers and operators try to correct them. And if you’re trying to correct these errors, what that means to me is: you want to go to more basic degrees of freedom that do not ever carry any error in them because they’re exact – they’re just classical. But to have this realization is apparently very difficult.

Detective: I wuld venture to suggest that when we unwind quantum mechanics, we see that it’s just optics. And that William Kingdon Clifford was ahead of his time too.

‘t Hooft: This is my feeling as to why we don’t make breakthroughs. We should think about things in a different manner.

Detective: my feeling is that some do think about things in a different manner, but they can’t get it past the custodians of orthodoxy.

Mysteries

Billings: It seems you’re saying we must live in a clockwork universe, one in which things must be purely deterministic at a very fundamental level, and thus there’s very little room for any sort of quasi-mystical speculation. And one consequence of that would seem to be the dissolution of mystery, to some degree. You mentioned earlier the stubborn persistence of an almost religious approach to quantum mechanics within the scientific community, not to mention in popular culture. Perhaps this attitude endures because, for so many people, it preserves something ineffable about all that we experience in the world rather than assuming everything can be known by filling in the right equations. So if you do believe in this sort of clockwork universe, I wonder what you’d say its most mysterious aspect would be.

‘t Hooft: Well, there are still many mysteries that make our problem very, very difficult. And this deterministic universe we discuss is something that could only be fully understood by someone with a much bigger mind, a much bigger brain, than I have because they’ll have to consider all possibilities. And as soon as you make some wrong assumption, then you again get this quantum-mechanical situation in which things get to superimpose each other.

Detective: just start at the beginning, read the old papers and the new papers, pay attention to the evidence, and a lot of those mysteries just go away. Without the need for a bigger brain.

‘t Hooft: A simpler question is: Can you formulate quantum mechanics without a superposition principle? And my answer is yes. And in one of my last [preprint] papers on arXiv.org, I wrote a little simple model – too simple to be useful in a real world. But the model is just a clock, a clock that has a pendulum that moves in a very organized way, and that pendulum drives a wheel that shows the time, the hands that show the minutes and seconds. And because of this, I call it my grandfather’s clock model. And from the pendulum, you can derive what time the hand should show. And these hands are deterministic. They are just showing a time with infinite precision, say. And the pendulum is really a quantum pendulum; it can be quantized; we can write quantum equations for it.

Detective: He’s referring to The Hidden Ontological Variable in Quantum Harmonic Oscillators. I concur with his sentiment.

‘t Hooft: I found the connection to the mathematics of this pendulum and the mathematics of this hand that shows the time. Keep in mind, the hand that shows the time is completely classical, and the pendulum is completely quantum-mechanical, but one is related to the other – it’s just one machine. But I got very few reactions to this. I would have thought that people would say, “Oh, yes, of course. Now we understand how to continue!” But instead they’ve said, “Okay, right, ‘t Hooft has another hot idea, another crazy idea. And he has many of those crazy ideas. Let him be happy with it; we’re going to do our own thing.” And that’s the most common reaction I’ve gotten.

Detective: I recall the opprobrium Joy Christian received for daring to suggest that quantum entanglement might have a non-mystical local explanation. See for example Scott Aaronson’s 2012 blog post entitled I was wrong about Joy Christian plus other similar posts. I hope ‘t Hooft doesn’t catch similar flak.

The holographic principle

Billings: I’d suspect the reasons for that reaction are, in some sense, not scientific and rather more “cultural,” right? I’m thinking of this in terms of the signal-to-noise ratio that exists for anyone trying to drink from the firehose of new preprint papers on arXiv.org and elsewhere. It can be very tough to know what to pay attention to and how to evaluate whatever does get one’s attention. That leads me to one more question. I’m curious how you feel about the cultural impacts of your scientific contributions, in particular the holographic principle, which you first proposed in the early 1990s.Arguably because of this idea, there are people – mostly nonscientists, I’d imagine – who truly believe that the cosmos is in fact within a black hole or that it’s all some simulation in a higher-dimensional computer. The idea being for this “simulation hypothesis” that perhaps nothing is “real” besides information itself, as everything else could just be a projection of patterns of 1’s and 0’s encoded on the outermost boundary of the observable universe. I wonder what you think about this phenomenon in which you put forth a provocative theoretical insight more than 30 years ago, and it has somehow led to the world’s richest man seriously suggesting on a popular podcast that “we are most likely” all just avatars in some cosmic-scale video game.

‘t Hooft: I do have some reservations. Maybe I should have never talked about the holographic principle because, yes, some people are galloping away into nonsense, linking this idea with supernatural features and poorly defined dimensionality, all to sound very mysterious. And I have a big problem with that. I think you shouldn’t phrase the laws of nature in more complicated terms than strictly necessary. You should simplify as much as possible. Even Einstein once said something like this, that you have to simplify things as much as possible but not beyond reality, not beyond the truth. We should try not to be supernatural; if we, as scientists, only leave a wake of mysteries behind us, we’re not doing the right thing.

Detective: I don’t want to talk about the holographic principle today. This article is too big already.

‘t Hooft: I am a bit worried that the holographic principle has only invited people to be more mysterious because I want the extreme opposite. I want people to try to be super rational. For me, even quantum mechanics is already too far away from reason. And you know, if you rephrase quantum mechanics to treat Hilbert space [a type of vector space that allows for infinite dimensions] as something used for practical purposes rather than Hilbert space being a fundamental property of nature, you don’t even need this sort of holography anymore! I wish more people understood that. We have to try to phrase things more precisely to avoid public misunderstandings wreaking havoc on science.

Detective: I too want people to try to be super rational. Actually, I think many people are, and I don’t think it’s public misunderstanding that’s been wreaking havoc on science. But never mind what I think, apart from this: all in all I think ‘t Hooft has done physics a great service with this interview. Live long and prosper, Gerardus.

END OF INTERVEW

 

* I may find I have to amend this article to paraphrase with fair-use excerpts due to copyright issues.

This Post Has 13 Comments

  1. Andy S

    Interesting interview. He is kinda like: ‘well I have won all the awards and contributed to this craziness, but you guys should really do something more realistic now. Peace Out!’. Pretty hypocritical. At least he is saying out loud that it has gone way too far.
    .
    Good points about not needing the superposition principle (which would be great because it is simply not true). I think they should reformulate QM so Heisenberg uncertainly principle is not required or used either, because that is also just made up. We now have atomic (optical) tweezers which can reportedly isolate a single atom, so you can know the position, movement, and the mass. Ok so that is not a particle, but our linear accelerators can speed up a single particle to a known speed at a given location, and since we know the mass of that particle, we CAN determine the mass, velocity, position, and momentum of a single particle, so Heisenbergs Uncertainty “Principle” was just made up because it was thought to be impossible at the time, but it is now possible.
    .
    Same goes for entanglement, just ditch that and reformulate it out.
    .
    If you got rid of those three things, it would get rid of the vast majority of whack insanity derived from QM, and you would be left with a decent model for predicting probabilities of things.
    .
    Hey John, still interested to get your thoughts on my post in the Theory of Everything, summarizing your theory. I also sent you a message via your website contact portal.

    1. Sandra

      Andy. “Heisenberg uncertainly principle is not required or used either, because that is also just made up” 🤦 unfortunately for you, the uncertainty principle is an entirely classical concept. It’s a direct consequence of fourier transforms.

      1. Andy

        Sandra,

        Again, you are so completely wrong it is so sad. You clearly know very little about quantum mechanics. The Heisenberg uncertainly principle is a foundational principle of quantum mechanics. Classical mechanics assumes that it is possible to know both the exact position and momentum of an object at any given time. Again here are some quotes from established sources:
        .
        The Uncertainty Principle – Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/qt-uncertainty/):
        .
        “The uncertainty principle is certainly one of the most famous aspects of quantum mechanics. It has often been regarded as the most distinctive feature in which quantum mechanics differs from classical theories of the physical world.”
        .
        LibreTexts Chemistry – Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle (https://chem.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Physical_and_Theoretical_Chemistry_Textbook_Maps/Supplemental_Modules_(Physical_and_Theoretical_Chemistry)/Quantum_Mechanics/02._Fundamental_Concepts_of_Quantum_Mechanics/Heisenberg's_Uncertainty_Principle):
        .
        “Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle is one of the most celebrated results of quantum mechanics and states that one (often, but not always) cannot know all things about a particle (as it is defined by it’s wave function) at the same time.”
        .
        February 1927: Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle – American Physical Society (https://www.aps.org/archives/publications/apsnews/200802/physicshistory.cfm)
        .
        “Heisenberg conducted a thought experiment as well. He considered trying to measure the position of an electron with a gamma ray microscope. The high-energy photon used to illuminate the electron would give it a kick, changing its momentum in an uncertain way. A higher resolution microscope would require higher energy light, giving an even bigger kick to the electron. The more precisely one tried to measure the position, the more uncertain the momentum would become, and vice versa, Heisenberg reasoned. This uncertainty is a fundamental feature of quantum mechanics, not a limitation of any particular experimental apparatus.”
        .
        So you can see if you actually did some reading that the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle is a core concept of Quantum Mechanics. Now you may have been referring to some uncertainty in measurements in classical physics, but this is due to inaccuracy of the measuring devices and equipment at the time and is totally different from the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle. The Heisenberg uncertainty principle really states that it is IMPOSSIBLE to know the position AND momentum of a particle exactly. I personally don’t believe that the Heisenberg uncertainty principle is always true.
        .
        Anyway, again, it is really sad you don’t even know what you don’t know. You seem to be just posting off the top of your head without even realizing how ridiculous and idiotic you are sounding. Try doing some reading and searching before you post, you might learn something.

        1. Sandra

          Andy: have some self respect and watch this video by 3Blue1Brown explaining what the uncertainity principle is. https://youtu.be/MBnnXbOM5S4?si=l9J36sqLDKoCQY5Z
          .
          The fact you’re accusing me of not knowing about QM would be funny if it weren’t so sad.

    2. The Physics detective

      Andy: all points noted. I’ve been a bit tied up of late with a non-physics matter. I’ll get back to you re the ToE and your email tomorrow. For now though, can I say that both superposition and the Heisenberg uncertainly principle are associated with waves. See for example and old version of the Wikipedia article on the uncertainty principle. It says this: “It has since become clearer, however, that the uncertainty principle is inherent in the properties of all wave-like systems, and that it arises in quantum mechanics simply due to the matter wave nature of all quantum objects”.

      1. The Physics detective

        Andy: Please resend your email. Apologies. I have a spam problem at present because my ISP has forced me to use an online version of Outlook that lacks filtering options. I couldn’t find your email.

  2. Andy

    Physics detective, I don’t have your email so I just sent you a message through your website comment page. Looking forward to your responses. Thanks!

  3. Greg🥸

    I really enjoyed the reconstruction of the Billings interview. Once you completely retire full-time from the IT ratrace John, you should definitely go into YouTube,ect….
    Anyway, I’m currently taking ‘t Hooft up his challenge stated in the very last paragraph, concerning Hilbert space.
    I too have been caught off guard : ChatGPT & Android UNANNOUNCED formatting changes amongst other potholes…….
    So, a few rudimentary math proofs are on the way for everyone’s perview, as soon as I get the bugs out.

  4. Raf

    Thanks John, interesting read, hope something will change in the community. I think it will have to come from non-brainwashed young generations. But then the guardians will say they are not “trained or educated “ properly. People dont listen to old and wise men anymore…
    The truth will always come to light…
    O and Andy: you are wrong, there is nothing special about Heisenberg, it is just a consequence of wave nature of things… actually it is proof that there are no such things as localized point particles… that they keep holding on to this myth is beyond me. I think >99,9% people still think the double split experiment is more then just optical effect…

  5. Raf

    And regarding ‘t Hoofd, he is a brilliant Mathematician, like most of them are, but i dont consider them physicists or scientists , because they don’t really explain or find underlying mechanisms behind things… it is a pity that only after they retire and there is no risk anymore that they are willing to speak out. Far too late I am afraid… i think it is because while their formulas and math are sound, they also realize that in a sense it didn’t really help with improving the understanding of the universe. Also Hawkings for example, i cannot think of a single thing he contributed that helps us in any way, but he is treated like a hero… all this black hole stuff is a waste of time, the name is thus appropriate

    1. Raf: I think your comments are spot on. Good man. When I first starting writing this article I found myself being critical of items mentioned in the introduction, and ended up deleting several hundred words because it was distracting from what ‘t Hooft was saying now. I utterly agree with your “only after they retire” point. Physics would be in a much better place if people like ‘t Hooft said their piece twenty years earlier.

  6. Raf

    Yes he is a heavyweight, but it is too late. I wonder if he would be open minded to comment on some of the theories that you have on this blog. There is no point criticizing his work, the ego is a fragile thing, but he makes valid points. Perhaps we can use the power of AI to generate some interesting movies for Youtube based on the info in your blog, it would get much more attention than the blog now… to me most of people like ‘t Hooft are men who like solving puzzles, and they are good at that. However they don’t seem to be driven by knowing what the puzzle is actually made off. And it seems you can build an entire career out of it…

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