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The Elegant Universe, Now Available Online

Photon Ghoul writes "PBS has made available online all three hours of the NOVA program on unified theory. Formats are QuickTime and RealVideo with each hour broken up into eight chapters each." I watched the whole thing, and while it's clearly for a lay audience (no math required), it was fun and informative. I was pleased to note that dissenting views on whether string theory was science were presented, and even brief discussion of what constitutes science.

10 of 309 comments (clear)

  1. Great Show by strictnein · · Score: 4, Informative

    Stumbled upon the show when it aired. As the post states it was a little basic in some parts, but they really lay string theory out. It was the first time I really felt like I had at least a little grasp of the subject.

    The 3D animated scenes around the host were also quite good.

  2. Superstring theory by drivelikejehu · · Score: 5, Informative

    Michio Kaku's Hyperspace: A Scientific Odyssey Through Parallel Universes, Time Warps and the Tenth Dimension is a really fascinating introduction into some of the theoretical physics that looks promising to develop a grand unified theory.

    1. Re:Superstring theory by tloh · · Score: 3, Informative
      I've been a astro-geek for as long as I can remember. A few years ago, I was blown away after reading "Hyperspace". At the time, I was truly impressed with Prof. Michio Kaku's elequent and penatrating writing style. As far as books on physics goes, my opinion is that his is a head and shoulder above Stephen Hawkings "A Brief History of Time". Unlike Hawking's tome, "Hyperspace" at times reads like a well written novel with an evolving plotline and compeling characters that put a human dimension on our quest for understanding reality.

      That all fell apart a few weeks ago when I came across an archived broadcast on the webpage of the NPR radio show "Science Friday".

      http://www.sciencefriday.com/pages/1997/Sep/hour2_ 090597.html

      Kaku was a guest on a discussion of the safety of Radio-isotope Thermal Generators (RTGs) which coincide with the launch of the much delayed Cassini mission to Saturn. The voice I heard completely floored me with his arrogance and condescension. He spoke about "saving science from the misguided hands of NASA" as a politician who has no appreciation of the hard work NASA engineers have accomplished would. He verbally assulted another science guest on the show as a "fringe" with no qualifications.

      This sounded nothing like the voice of knowledge and wisdom I had come to know in the pages of "Hyperspace". Surely Mr. Kaku must be just having a bad day? I set out to scour the web and find out more rational words from the man. I was disapointed. The most promanent source document I have found on the subject is a speech he delivered at Cape Canaveral.

      http://www.lovearth.org/mkaku.htm

      another more formal and detailed expository:

      http://www.animatedsoftware.com/cassini/mk9708so.h tm

      There is no loss of elegance, and the retoric is as insightful as ever. But after you finish reading them, you realize that he is long on criticism and short on solutions. Furthermore, he completely fails to make any mention of rebuttals (extremely sound and very obvious rebuttals, I might add) to the ideas he is advancing. I can go on about exactly how he leaves us short for many more paragraphs. But I'm off topic as it is so I'll let you pursue that at your own discression.

      Basically, I got the distinct impression that the man is a megalomaniac. It would have been forgivable if he had been an activist in the spirit of Carl Sagan's conservation activities. But it seems this guy, on this particular subject at least, is purely out for attention and will stop at nothing to get it. I find it sad and disapointing when smart people overstep the boundaries of authority or credibility and abuse the trust and admiration the public has given them. Thankfully, I'm not alone. Attached to a blurb at geek.com, the first two comments raise questions about Mr. Kaku views just as I have.

      I am a fan of Dr Kaku (4:26pm EST Fri Jun 27 2003)
      But, I need to respond with a resounding, HUH? to this blurb. Dr. Kaku has giving me invaluable insights into string theory, and his ideaas for public policy are well reasoned and logical, but what's with the report on needed to turn off artificial monkey brains? Heck, I am as liberal and prohuman as the next guy, but I feel that I could really use some murderous sim simians. - by IA my eye

      Quack (5:06pm EST Fri Jun 27 2003)
      I read Visions and had a high opinion of Dr. Kaku, until I realized he was the central figure organizing and supporting the protests against the launch of the Ullyses Saturn Probe.
      He did this because he believed that the RTGs on the probe would contaminate the earth if they re-entered the atmosphere. The probability of this happening is beyond remot

      --
      Stay sentient. Don't drink bad milk.
  3. Experiment is what counts by mpn14tech · · Score: 4, Informative

    Just remember, no matter how elegant the theory or fascinating this series is, it is just a theory. A big leap of faith. For it to be worth anything, there must be an experimentally verifiable result.

    Personally, I hope we are getting close.

  4. Re:Download? by werdnapk · · Score: 3, Informative

    Part I:
    http://www.logged.org/suprnova/torrents/528/PBS-No va-The.Elegant.Universe-Part.I-Einsteins.Universe- SctV-avi.torrent

    Part II:
    http://www.logged.org/suprnova/torrents/530/PBS-No va-The.Elegant.Universe-Part.II-Strings.the.Thing- SctV-avi.torrent

    Part III:
    http://www.oinkfrickinbaaa.co.uk/suprnova/torrents /537/PBS-Nova-The.Elegant.Universe-Part.III-Welcom e.to.the.11th.Dimension-SctV-avi.torrent

    Remove the spaces from the urls, I don't know why they're there.

  5. torrents by frogsarefriendly · · Score: 3, Informative

    Part I
    Part II
    Part III
    More downloaders, the better!

  6. Re:BitTorrent links by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Too bad none of those links seem to work... heres a few that work (direct torrent file links):

    Part 1
    Part 2
    Part 3

  7. Re:Download? by Gherald · · Score: 5, Informative

    The spaces are there because you chose "Plain Old Text" when you posted.

    And third URL doesn't even work, so here are some working and proper links:

    Part I

    Part II

    Part III

  8. Re:BitTorrent links by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Argh just noticed the 3rd link is the one that doesnt work.. here fixed:

    Part 3

    Sorry about that.

    Oh and just one more thing: If possible, still buy the DVD when it comes out, support PBS.. It comes out in january and im gonna buy it

  9. Truly Excellent! by Mister+Transistor · · Score: 4, Informative

    This was a superb series! I enjoyed it thoroughly, as did most of my colleagues.

    I snagged the 3 episodes on my hand-dandy video capture box and mastered a DVD from them, compressing the 3 hours onto 1 DVD.

    I'm glad they're making the whole thing available online; it makes me feel better about giving my buddy a copy of my DVD...

    He missed the second episode - the series had such a loooong (2:48) introduction, he thought they were re-airing the 1st episode again and turned it off! I told him no - there were 2 different episodes aired back-to-back :)

    All-in-all, while I agree it was a bit "lay" (non-technical) in nature, it did explain a few things I hadn't known about previously, so I did enjoy watching it.

    --
    -- You are in a maze of little, twisty passages, all different... --