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The Grand Design is a popular-science book written by physicists Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow. The book point out that a Unified Field Theory may not exist. Albert Einstein and other physicists had proposed such a theory based on an early model of the universe containing three-dimensions and time. When and how did the universe begin? Why are we here? What is the nature of reality? Is the apparent “grand design” of our universe evidence of a benevolent creator who set things in motion—or does science offer another explanation? In this startling and lavishly illustrated book, Stephen. The Grand Design ALSO BY STEPHEN HAWKING A Brief History of Time A Briefer History of Time Black Holes and Baby Universes and Other Essays The Illustrated A Brief History of Time The Universe in a Nutshell FOR CHILDREN George’s Secret Key to the Universe (with Lucy Hawking) George’s Cosmic Treasure Hunt (with Lucy Hawking). Sep 02, 2010  The Grand Design - Kindle edition by Stephen Hawking, Leonard Mlodinow. Download it once and read it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or tablets. Use features like bookmarks, note taking and highlighting while reading The Grand Design.

THE FIRST MAJOR WORK IN NEARLY A DECADE BY ONE OF THE WORLD’S GREAT THINKERS—A MARVELOUSLY CONCISE BOOK WITH NEW ANSWERS TO THE ULTIMATE QUESTIONS OF LIFE
When and how did the universe begin? Why are we here? Why is there something rather than nothing? What is the nature of reality? Why are the laws of nature so finely tuned as to allow for the existence of beings like our
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Published September 7th 2010 by Bantam (first published September 2010)
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Popular Answered Questions
Ben McDonaldin a word, yes. one of the main ideas in the book is 'M-theory.' A theory of everything, a single equation that maps out and explains the whole of…morein a word, yes. one of the main ideas in the book is 'M-theory.' A theory of everything, a single equation that maps out and explains the whole of existance. it's logical to accept such a thing exists. but the religious contrevercy occurs when you apply this logic: if M-theory is reolised then there will be no need for a god to map out and explain the whole of existance. (less)
Mark BalsonSeptember 7th 2010 by Bantam
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Rating details

Jul 30, 2010Cindy rated it really liked it
It's a funny thing being a cosmologist in the greater Los Angeles area. Back when I was a partying single graduate student, I'd frequently hit the town for some fun. Inevitably I'd meet someone, strike up a conversation, and they might ask me what I did for a living.
'Oh, I'm a cosmologist.'
'Cosmetologist? Cool, do you do make-up for movies?'
'Um..not unless rouge is a component of dark matter.' (ba-da-bum)
'..'
'I make detectors and use them to study the origins and geometry of our universe.'
'
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Sep 12, 2010Kemper rated it really liked it
Shelves: sky-cake, non-fiction, blinded-me-with-science
When this book was released, I was reading a story about it on-line, and the headline said something like: “Stephen Hawking Says There Is No God”. Then I made the critical mistake of looking at the user comments under the story. It was the usual collection of badly spelled notes from ignorant asshats who tried to say that stupid science didn’t know nuthin’ or that it was all Obama’s fault.
But one in particular caught my eye. It was by someone who undoubtedly dabbles in both neurosurgery and roc
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Jul 27, 2012Manny rated it did not like it · review of another edition
Shelves: science-fiction, science, children, multiverse
Look John look!
See the pop science bestseller.
See the glossy paper.
See the large font.
See the wide margins.
See the world-famous physicist.
See the ghostwriter.
See the double slit experiment!
Maybe you have seen it before.
But you can never see the double slit experiment too many times.
See the theory of everything.
It is free of infinities.
Probably.
Anyway, never mind that.
See the quantum multiverse!
See the strong anthropic principle.
See them explain the mystery of being.
They are science.
They make pre
..more
Apr 06, 2013Ahmad Sharabiani rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: physics, philosophy, 21th-century, non-fiction, space, astronomy
The Grand Design, Stephen Hawking
The Grand Design is a popular-science book written by physicists Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow and published by Bantam Books in 2010. The book examines the history of scientific knowledge about the universe and explains 11 dimension M-theory. The authors of the book point out that a Unified Field Theory (a theory, based on an early model of the universe, proposed by Albert Einstein and other physicists) may not exist.
تاریخ نخستین خوانش: روز چهارم ماه مارس
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Jan 28, 2011Marvin rated it really liked it

Stephen Hawking is smarter than I am. That's no big feat because two of my cats are smarter than I am. The other cat is a certifiable idiot. But Hawking is way smarter than I am. The Grand Design is Hawking's explanation, more or less, about why the universe is the way it is. The answer comes down to M-theory which is more of a combining of explanations than one single unifying theory. Many reviewers seem to think Hawking is saying there is no God but he really seems to be stating that God is
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Note: I'm a physicist, so my experience reading this was colored by my training.
Hawking and Mlodinow begin by declaring, on the very first page, that 'philosophy is dead,' and that modern science alone must carry our search for knowledge into the future. Several pages later, they launch into a purely philosophical discussion on the nature of reality and discovery. Dead, indeed. In my opinion, this accurately colors the entire book, and if you can't stomach this kind of hard-and-fast science for
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Oct 19, 2018Manuel Antão rated it did not like it
If you're into stuff like this, you can read the full review.
Epidemic of Vanity: 'The Grand Design' by Stephen Hawking, Leonard Mlodinow
(Original Review, 2010)
At university, after spending thousands on tuition, I then had to spend a lot, over 3 years, on books for my courses. More than half were written by the very professors that were teaching me. Quite frankly, it's a giant scam. Those professors have already been paid for the first material through their salaries. Why should we have to pay th
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Sep 19, 2011Riku Sayuj rated it really liked it
In the first chapter Hawking says that his aim is to provide an answer to 'Life, Universe and Everything' and goes on to assure us that his answer will not merely be '42'. After just completing the last chapter, I think I still prefer '42'.
I have a feeling that the publishing industry is milking Stephen Hawking. There was a time when we had a dashing physicist named Richard Feynman who used LSD and played banjo in a strip club. The naked pole dancers didn’t distract him from formulating quantum electrodynamics. He was quite a genius, and he was all over the place with his talks and popular books. But he’s dead. Now Stephen Hawking seems to be the coolest physicist around. He’s paralyzed and wheelchair-bound, and he speaks through..more
Aug 05, 2017Tulay rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Love to talk or read about very smart people, they always teach me and make me look at things differently. Never miss any programs on TV about our home and universe, or fill my library with books in this subject. Some theories and scientific explanations was over my head, but help to make me understand was just phone call away.
Jul 30, 2010Bettie rated it really liked it
Shelves: published-2010, spring-2013, autumn-2010, dip-in-now-and-again, spaaaaaace, fraudio, sciences, nonfiction, autumn-2016

01.11.2016: Stephen Hawking warns that the Higgs Boson field could collapse, resulting in a chain reaction that would take in the whole universe with it. The nihilists have been right all along..
M-theory: Doubts linger over godless multiverse
STEPHEN HAWKING'S new book The Grand Design sparked a furore over whether physics can be used to disprove the existence of God. But few have noted that the idea at the core of the book, M-theory, is the subject of an ongoing scientific debate – specifical
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Wake me up when you actually define M-Theory.
(Which has yet to be defined)
This was a short read that cost WAY TOO MUCH money.
Any book I can read in a day should cost less than 9 dollars.
As a cosmologist and a Stephen Hawking fan, I have a real issue with this book. His statement, that the Universe unpacks itself and therefore does not need a creator is based on some really flawed logic called 'model dependent realism'. MDR is a way of comparing reality to a model, if the model produces the same observable characteristics as observed in reality then the model is said to be as true as any other model.
Imagine this, if there was equal amounts of incriminating evidence that two peop
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After reading Bill Bryson's A Short History of Nearly Everything and Brian Greene's The Fabric of the Cosmos, I felt that I might finally be ready for my first Hawking book. There were a couple of sections that I re-read, in an attempt to make concrete some of the more abstract aspects of m-theory. Despite my rudimentary understanding of quantum physics, I still gleaned a great deal from this book and would recommend it to anyone who is even mildly curious. Those who have a more advanced educati..more
Jul 08, 2015Shaun rated it really liked it
Once again, I am awed and blown away by the f'ing awesomeness of the universe, and it struck me how presumptuous many of us are considering our insignificance in the grand scope of things.
I have two science based degrees, but Physics was never my strong suit, and I'd be lying if I said everything in his book made perfect sense. On the flip side, I had several light bulb moments, which is always nice.
Among other things, Hawking makes a few great points particularly about the essence of 'reality.'
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Jan 17, 2012Erik Graff rated it did not like it · review of another edition
Recommended to Erik by: A.M.
I was given this book as a reward for helping a friend pick up and deliver newly purchased furniture. As is the case with most such gifts, I began to read it immediately.
I was almost immediately turned off by the text owing to an extraordinary display of ignorance on the part of the authors and the editors, a mistake appearing in the first few pages in their lead-up to what is supposed to be a survey of the history of physics as germinated in Ionian philosophy. Here they note in passing that wri
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Jan 02, 2018Abdullah Khalid rated it really liked it
The Authors try to explain the origin and purpose of the universe from scientific point of view. At first we are told about the concept of formation of universe in the earlier times. From ancient Greeks to Galileo, Newton to Feynman , basic classical theories to the formulation of M-theory , this books tries to explain the fundamental questions related to Universe. It's a very good book if you are striving to comprehend the Universe scientifically . And the explanation is simple enough for a nor..more
Jun 25, 2012Andrew Langridge rated it did not like it
There are only a couple of positives that I can think to say about this book. Firstly, Hawking has some Feynman-like qualities in being able to lucidly express important ideas in physics such as time dilation in special relativity and the double slit experiment. Secondly, his philosophy of science that he calls model-based realism has many things going for it, although why it is called realism is never fully explained. I did not find this book particularly easy to read, probably because I did no..more
Nov 03, 2010Julia rated it liked it
I own several of Hawking's books, and so I was drawn to this thin volume. Obviously his co-author did most of the work, since Hawking's health continues to deteriorate. Mlodinow is a physicist at Caltech and an author in his own right. His name should appear as co-author, but my cynical brain thinks the publisher felt Hawking's name would sell more copies.
Much time is given to Richard Feynman and his work in quantum physics. In fact, this book promotes the study of quantum theory as the main ans
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Nov 03, 2018Kat Kennedy rated it liked it · review of another edition
I think the start of this book far exceeds the latter half. Which, for me, was an enormous slog to get through.
Jul 24, 2017Jill rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
STEPHEN HAWKING WRITES VERY CLEARLY.
That's like the big glaring thing I need to express with this review. Are you worried you won't understand science because it's dense and dry and has diagrams instead of pictures? This is the book for you, then -- short, succinct, full-colour, and most importantly: clearly explained. The concepts here are intense and heady, but Hawking (and Mlodinow) write about them in a way you can actually understand.
The mathematics are lacking, so this is definitely pop-s
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Jun 03, 2016Alex rated it it was amazing
Shelves: read-and-own-as-reference, science, 10-top-all-time-intellect, 10-top-true-nature-of-reality
He can get quite technical at times but overall a cogent read. In the end, he jumped a little for me. For example, here he tries to refute that a creator is required:
'If the total energy of the universe must always remain zero, and it costs energy to create a body, how can a whole universe be created from nothing? That is why there must be a law like gravity. Because gravity is attractive, gravitational energy is negative: one has to do work to separate a gravitationally bound system.. black ho
..more
Mar 05, 2014Nicole Rhaven rated it it was amazing
I enjoyed this book. It touched base on a lot of the intellectual things that I already think about on a daily basis.
Jun 05, 2013Ana rated it really liked it
Shelves: brainy-psychological, page-turner, borrowed, humour-me, non-fiction, me-likey-a-lot, couldn-t-understand
Ever since I was little, I remember the image of Stephen Hawking from TV. I don't know why, but he remained embroidered in my brain after watching a TV show that spoke of him. This must have been 10 years ago, or something like that, but when it was explained to me what he was and what he was doing and did and why he looked the way he looked (remember I was 7 or 8 so I was bound to ask hurtful questions), I became to develop this fondness towards him.
In my late years (oh, I'm soooo old), when I
..more
Feb 14, 2017Vikalp Trivedi rated it it was amazing
'The Grand Design' by Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow is an attempt (and actually a brilliant one) to understand some philosophical questions in a scientific manner . As the book cover suggests 'New answers to the ultimate questions of life.' and the book successfully gives the answers .
Some of my most favourite parts of the book are those about reality and alternate histories . Recently I have watched a film 'Doctor Strange' there is a quote in the film - 'The reality which you know is o
..more
Aug 07, 2010David rated it liked it
This is a short, elegant, beautifully illustrated book. I read it in less than a day. The book gives a good answer to the so-called 'anthropic principle'--namely, that the laws of physics and the fundamental constants appear to be perfectly tuned to allow our world, life, and humans to develop. If any of the laws or fundamental constants were to deviate even slightly, life might not be even possible.
The answer to this dilemma, the authors state, is not that God created the laws of physics, and t
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May 24, 2017Safiya rated it did not like it
I'm terribly deceived..
In short, it hovered above THE Question, how did the Big Bang happen and Why ?
I mean that granted getting to know deep/complicated theories about astrophysics, and the TOE was challenging, but I felt empty in the inside after finishing it, simply because the introduction promised answers, and was put in such a scientifically yet appealing way that I was broken-hearted after closing with no answers..
Jan 08, 2011Ben Babcock rated it liked it
Shelves: own, philosophy, 2011-read, non-fiction, religion, science
I make no secret about the fact that I love science, and of all the sciences, I will make no secret about my love for physics, for theoretical physics, and for cosmology. These fields help us understand the universe, that crazy thing that’s all around us, and the fact that we have come so far is simply amazing. In The Grand Design, Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow reflect upon how physics achieves this understanding of the universe, with a particular emphasis on how physics can explain the o..more
I've read snippets of Hawking's books before and enjoyed them. The particular theme of this one interested me so I picked it up. It started out with some creation myths and a well-paced history of bigger picture science. It bogged down in the middle with an exploration of quantam physics that the author felt was necessary for his subsequent theory of Grand Design, but in reality did little for his theory or the book as a whole.
In fact, while engaging, fun to read, and highly informative, the boo
..more
I once had a friend that was taught by Stephen Hawking. He said that Stephen was a brilliant man, but a poor teacher, and within the community of theoretical physicists, his profile far exceeded his achievements. He caught the interest of his peers with contributions to our understanding of black holes, and the interest of the public first through the release of the now infamous A Brief History of Time (which has sold over 10 million copies), and second, via his personal struggle with motor neur..more
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Stephen William Hawking was born on 8 January 1942 in Oxford, England. His parents' house was in north London, but during the second world war Oxford was considered a safer place to have babies. When he was eight, his family moved to St Albans, a town about 20 miles north of London. At eleven Stephen went to St Albans School, and then on to University College, Oxford, his father's old college. Ste..more
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The Grand Design
AuthorStephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
PublisherBantam Books
Publication date
September 7, 2010
Media typePrint (Hardcover)
Pages208
ISBN0-553-80537-1
Preceded byGod Created the Integers
Followed byThe Dreams That Stuff Is Made Of

The Grand Design is a popular-sciencebook written by physicistsStephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow and published by Bantam Books in 2010. The book examines the history of scientific knowledge about the universe and explains 11 dimension M-theory. The authors of the book point out that a Unified Field Theory (a theory, based on an early model of the universe, proposed by Albert Einstein and other physicists) may not exist.[1]

It argues that invoking God is not necessary to explain the origins of the universe, and that the Big Bang is a consequence of the laws of physics alone.[2] In response to criticism, Hawking said: 'One can't prove that God doesn't exist, but science makes God unnecessary.'[3] When pressed on his own religious views by the Channel 4 documentary Genius of Britain, he clarified that he did not believe in a personal God.[4][5]

Published in the United States on September 7, 2010, the book became the number one bestseller on Amazon.com just a few days after publication.[6][7]It was published in the United Kingdom on September 9, 2010, and became the number two bestseller on Amazon.co.uk on the same day. It topped the list of adult non-fiction books of The New York Times Non-fiction Best Seller list in Sept-Oct 2010.[8]

  • 2Reactions

Synopsis[edit]

The book examines the history of scientific knowledge about the universe. It starts with the IonianGreeks, who claimed that nature works by laws, and not by the will of the gods. It later presents the work of Nicolaus Copernicus, who advocated the concept that the Earth is not located in the center of the universe.[9]

The authors then describe the theory of quantum mechanics using, as an example, the probable movement of an electron around a room. The presentation has been described as easy to understand by some reviewers, but also as sometimes 'impenetrable,' by others.[6][9]

Grand Design Tv Show

The central claim of the book is that the theory of quantum mechanics and the theory of relativity together help us understand how universes could have formed out of nothing.[9]

The authors write:

Because there is a law such as gravity, the universe can and will create itself from nothing. Spontaneous creation is the reason there is something rather than nothing, why the universe exists, why we exist. It is not necessary to invoke God to light the blue touch paper and set the universe going.
— Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow, The Grand Design, 2010[10]

The authors explain, in a manner consistent with M-theory, that as the Earth is only one of several planets in our solar system, and as our Milky Waygalaxy is only one of many galaxies, the same may apply to our universe itself: that is, our universe may be one of a huge number of universes.[9]

The book concludes with the statement that only some universes of the multiple universes (or multiverse) support life forms and that we are located in one of those universes. The laws of nature that are required for life forms to exist appear in some universes by pure chance[clarification needed], Hawking and Mlodinow explain (see Anthropic principle).[9]

Reactions[edit]

Positive reactions[edit]

Evolutionary biologist and advocate for atheismRichard Dawkins welcomed Hawking's position and said that 'Darwinism kicked God out of biology but physics remained more uncertain. Hawking is now administering the coup de grace.'[11]

Theoretical physicist Sean M. Carroll, writing in The Wall Street Journal, described the book as speculative but ambitious: 'The important lesson of The Grand Design is not so much the particular theory being advocated but the sense that science may be able to answer the deep 'Why?' questions that are part of fundamental human curiosity.'[12]

CosmologistLawrence Krauss, in his article 'Our Spontaneous Universe', wrote that 'there are remarkable, testable arguments that provide firmer empirical evidence of the possibility that our universe arose from nothing. .. If our universe arose spontaneously from nothing at all, one might predict that its total energy should be zero. And when we measure the total energy of the universe, which could have been anything, the answer turns out to be the only one consistent with this possibility. Coincidence? Maybe. But data like this coming in from our revolutionary new tools promise to turn much of what is now metaphysics into physics. Whether God survives is anyone's guess.'[13]

James Trefil, a professor of physics at George Mason University, said in his Washington Post review: 'I've waited a long time for this book. It gets into the deepest questions of modern cosmology without a single equation. The reader will be able to get through it without bogging down in a lot of technical detail and will, I hope, have his or her appetite whetted for books with a deeper technical content. And who knows? Maybe in the end the whole multiverse idea will actually turn out to be right!'[9]Canada Press journalist Carl Hartman said: 'Cosmologists, the people who study the entire cosmos, will want to read British physicist and mathematician Stephen Hawking's new book. The Grand Design may sharpen appetites for answers to questions like 'Why is there something rather than nothing?' and 'Why do we exist?' – questions that have troubled thinking people at least as far back as the ancient Greeks.'

Writing in the Los Angeles Times, Michael Moorcock praised the authors: 'their arguments do indeed bring us closer to seeing our world, universe and multiverse in terms that a previous generation might easily have dismissed as supernatural. This succinct, easily digested book could perhaps do with fewer dry, academic groaners, but Hawking and Mlodinow pack in a wealth of ideas and leave us with a clearer understanding of modern physics in all its invigorating complexity.'[1]

German daily Süddeutsche Zeitung devoted the whole opening page of its culture section to The Grand Design. CERN physicist and novelist Ralf Bönt reviews the history of the theory of everything from the 18th century to M-theory, and takes Hawking's conclusion on God's existence as a very good joke which he obviously welcomes very much.[14]

Best selling author Deepak Chopra in an interview with CNN said: 'We have to congratulate Leonard and Stephen for finally, finally contributing to the climatic overthrow of the superstition of materialism. Because everything that we call matter comes from this domain which is invisible, which is beyond space and time. All religious experience is based on just three basic fundamental ideas..And nothing in the book invalidates any of these three ideas'.[15]

Critical reactions[edit]

Ebay snipe software. Roger Penrose in the FT doubts that adequate understandings can come from this approach, and points out that 'unlike quantum mechanics, M-theory enjoys no observational support whatsoever'.[16]Joe Silk in Science suggests that 'Some humbleness would be welcome here..A century or two hence..I expect that M-theory will seem as naïve to cosmologists of the future as we now find Pythagoras's cosmology of the harmony of the spheres'.[17]

Gerald Schroeder in 'The Big Bang Creation: God or the Laws of Nature' explains that 'The Grand Design breaks the news, bitter to some, that … to create a universe from absolute nothing God is not necessary. All that is needed are the laws of nature. … [That is,] there can have been a big bang creation without the help of God, provided the laws of nature pre-date the universe. Our concept of time begins with the creation of the universe. Therefore if the laws of nature created the universe, these laws must have existed prior to time; that is the laws of nature would be outside of time. What we have then is totally non-physical laws, outside of time, creating a universe. Now that description might sound somewhat familiar. Very much like the biblical concept of God: not physical, outside of time, able to create a universe.'[18]

Dwight Garner in The New York Times was critical of the book, saying: 'The real news about The Grand Design is how disappointingly tinny and inelegant it is. The spare and earnest voice that Mr. Hawking employed with such appeal in A Brief History of Time has been replaced here by one that is alternately condescending, as if he were Mr. Rogers explaining rain clouds to toddlers, and impenetrable.'[6]

Craig Callender, in the New Scientist, was not convinced by the theory promoted in the book: 'M-theory .. is far from complete. But that doesn't stop the authors from asserting that it explains the mysteries of existence .. In the absence of theory, though, this is nothing more than a hunch doomed – until we start watching universes come into being – to remain untested. The lesson isn't that we face a dilemma between God and the multiverse, but that we shouldn't go off the rails at the first sign of coincidences.[19]

Paul Davies in The Guardian wrote: 'The multiverse comes with a lot of baggage, such as an overarching space and time to host all those bangs, a universe-generating mechanism to trigger them, physical fields to populate the universes with material stuff, and a selection of forces to make things happen. Cosmologists embrace these features by envisaging sweeping 'meta-laws' that pervade the multiverse and spawn specific bylaws on a universe-by-universe basis. The meta-laws themselves remain unexplained – eternal, immutable transcendent entities that just happen to exist and must simply be accepted as given. In that respect the meta-laws have a similar status to an unexplained transcendent god.' Davies concludes 'there is no compelling need for a supernatural being or prime mover to start the universe off. But when it comes to the laws that explain the big bang, we are in murkier waters.'[20]

Dr. Marcelo Gleiser, in his article 'Hawking And God: An Intimate Relationship', stated that 'contemplating a final theory is inconsistent with the very essence of physics, an empirical science based on the gradual collection of data. Because we don’t have instruments capable of measuring all of Nature, we cannot ever be certain that we have a final theory. There’ll always be room for surprises, as the history of physics has shown again and again. In fact, I find it quite pretentious to imagine that we humans can achieve such a thing. .. Maybe Hawking should leave God alone.'[21]

Physicist Peter Woit, of Columbia University, has criticized the book: 'One thing that is sure to generate sales for a book of this kind is to somehow drag in religion. The book's rather conventional claim that 'God is unnecessary' for explaining physics and early universe cosmology has provided a lot of publicity for the book. I'm in favor of naturalism and leaving God out of physics as much as the next person, but if you're the sort who wants to go to battle in the science/religion wars, why you would choose to take up such a dubious weapon as M-theory mystifies me.'[22]

In Scientific American, John Horgan is not sympathetic to the book: 'M-theory, theorists now realize, comes in an almost infinite number of versions, which 'predict' an almost infinite number of possible universes. Critics call this the 'Alice's Restaurant problem,' a reference to the refrain of the old Arlo Guthrie folk song: 'You can get anything you want at Alice's Restaurant.' Of course, a theory that predicts everything really doesn't predict anything..The anthropic principle has always struck me as so dumb that I can't understand why anyone takes it seriously. It's cosmology's version of creationism. .. The physicist Tony Rothman, with whom I worked at Scientific American in the 1990s, liked to say that the anthropic principle in any form is completely ridiculous and hence should be called CRAP. ..Hawking is telling us that unconfirmable M-theory plus the anthropic tautology represents the end of that quest. If we believe him, the joke’s on us.'[23]

The Economist is also critical of the book: Hawking and Mlodinow '..say that these surprising ideas have passed every experimental test to which they have been put, but that is misleading in a way that is unfortunately typical of the authors. It is the bare bones of quantum mechanics that have proved to be consistent with what is presently known of the subatomic world. The authors' interpretations and extrapolations of it have not been subjected to any decisive tests, and it is not clear that they ever could be. Once upon a time it was the province of philosophy to propose ambitious and outlandish theories in advance of any concrete evidence for them. Perhaps science, as Professor Hawking and Mr Mlodinow practice it in their airier moments, has indeed changed places with philosophy, though probably not quite in the way that they think.'[24]

The Bishop of Swindon, Dr. Lee Rayfield, said, 'Science can never prove the non-existence of God, just as it can never prove the existence of God.'[25]Anglicanpriest, Cambridgetheologian and psychologistRev. Dr. Fraser N. Watts[26] said 'a creator God provides a reasonable and credible explanation of why there is a universe, and .. it is somewhat more likely that there is a God than that there is not. That view is not undermined by what Hawking has said.'[2]

British scientist Baroness Greenfield also criticized the book in an interview with BBC Radio: 'Of course they can make whatever comments they like, but when they assume, rather in a Taliban-like way, that they have all the answers, then I do feel uncomfortable.' She later claimed her Taliban remarks were 'not intended to be personal', saying she 'admired Stephen Hawking greatly' and 'had no wish to compare him in particular to the Taliban'.[27]

Denis Alexander responded to Stephen Hawking's The Grand Design by stating that 'the 'god' that Stephen Hawking is trying to debunk is not the creator God of the Abrahamic faiths who really is the ultimate explanation for why there is something rather than nothing', adding that 'Hawking's god is a god-of-the-gaps used to plug present gaps in our scientific knowledge.' 'Science provides us with a wonderful narrative as to how [existence] may happen, but theology addresses the meaning of the narrative'.[28]

Mathematician and philosopher of scienceWolfgang Smith wrote a chapter-by-chapter summary and critique of the book, first published in Sophia: The Journal of Traditional Studies,[29] and subsequently published as 'From Physics to Science Fiction: Response to Stephen Hawking' in the 2012 edition of his collection of essays, Science & Myth.

See also[edit]

  • A Brief History of Time – Classic 1988 book by Stephen Hawking
  • A Briefer History of Time – 2005 popular science book by Stephen Hawking
  • Brief Answers to the Big Questions – 2018 popular science book by Stephen Hawking

References[edit]

  1. ^ abMichael Moorcock (2010-09-05). 'Book review: 'The Grand Design' by Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow'. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-09-03.
  2. ^ abRichard Allen Greene (2010-09-02). 'Stephen Hawking: God didn't create universe'. CNN. Retrieved 2010-09-04.
  3. ^Nick Watt (2010). 'Stephen Hawking: 'Science Makes God Unnecessary''. ABC News. Retrieved 2015-05-01.
  4. ^Laura Roberts (2010-09-02). 'Stephen Hawking: God was not needed to create the Universe'. The Telegraph. Retrieved 2015-05-01.
  5. ^Graham Farmello (2010-09-03). 'Has Stephen Hawking ended the God debate?'. The Telegraph. Retrieved 2015-05-01.
  6. ^ abcDwight Garner (2010-09-07). 'Many Kinds of Universes, and None Require God'. New York Times. Retrieved 2010-09-09.
  7. ^Nate Freeman (2010-09-03). 'Hawking's Book Shoots to Top of Amazon Sales After He Denies God's Existence'. The New York Observer. Retrieved 2015-05-01.
  8. ^'Hardcover Nonfiction'. NYTimes.com. Retrieved 25 April 2013.
  9. ^ abcdefJames Trefil (2010-09-05). 'Review of 'The Grand Design,' by Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow'. Washington Post. Retrieved 2010-09-05.
  10. ^Michael Holden (2010-09-02). 'God did not create the universe, says Hawking'. Reuters. Retrieved 2010-10-17.
  11. ^'Another ungodly squabble'. The Economist. 2010-09-05. Retrieved 2010-09-06.
  12. ^Sean M. Carroll (2010-09-24). 'The 'Why?' Questions, Chapter and Multiverse'. The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2011-10-02.
  13. ^Lawrence Krauss (2010-09-08). 'Our Spontaneous Universe'. Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2010-09-13.
  14. ^Ralf Bönt (September 2010). 'A Brief History of the Theory of Everything: Stephen Hawking Makes a Joke, and it Works'. Süddeutsche Zeitung. Retrieved 2010-11-19.
  15. ^CNN LARRY KING LIVE Interview With Stephen Hawking; Science and Religion Aired September 10, 2010 - 21:00 ET
  16. ^Roger Penrose (4 September 2010). 'The Grand Design'. Financial Times. Retrieved 2015-05-01.
  17. ^One Theory to Rule Them All by Joe SilkScience 8 October 2010: Vol. 330 no. 6001 pp. 179-180 doi:10.1126/science.1197317
  18. ^Gerald Schroeder. 'The Big Bang Creation: God or the Laws of Nature'. Retrieved 2015-05-01.
  19. ^Craig Callender (2010-09-02). 'Stephen Hawking says there's no theory of everything'. New Scientist. Retrieved 2010-09-09.
  20. ^Paul Davies (2010-09-04). 'Stephen Hawking's big bang gaps'. The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2010-09-12.
  21. ^Marcelo Gleiser (2010-09-09). 'Hawking And God: An Intimate Relationship'. National Public Radio. Retrieved 2010-09-09.
  22. ^Woit, Peter (2010-09-08). 'Hawking Gives Up'. Retrieved 2010-09-15.
  23. ^John Horgan (2010-09-13). 'Cosmic Clowning: Stephen Hawking's 'new' theory of everything is the same old CRAP'. Scientific American. Retrieved 2015-05-01.
  24. ^'Understanding the universe - Order of creation'. The Economist. 2010-09-09. Retrieved 2010-09-18.
  25. ^'Stephen Hawking: God did not create Universe'. BBC. 2010-09-02. Retrieved 2010-09-03.
  26. ^Dr Fraser Watts Archived 2010-09-06 at the Wayback Machine, Faculty of Divinity, University of Cambridge
  27. ^Alastair Jamieson (2010-09-08). 'Baroness Greenfield criticises 'Taliban-like' Stephen Hawking'. The Telegraph. Retrieved 2015-05-01.
  28. ^Richard Allen Greene, CNN (2 September 2010). 'Stephen Hawking: God didn't create universe'. CNN.com. Retrieved 12 December 2010.
  29. ^Sophia: The Journal of Traditional Studies, Volume 16, No 2, 2011,pp. 5-48.

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