How the hippies saved physics

science, counterculture, and the quantum revival

372 pages

English language

Published Nov. 10, 2011 by W.W. Norton.

ISBN:
978-0-393-07636-3
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OCLC Number:
668194856

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2 stars (1 review)

Describes how a quirky band of misfit science students at Berkeley in the 1970s altered the course of modern physics while studying quantum theory alongside Eastern mysticism and psychic mind reading while lounging in hot tubs and dabbling with LSD.

5 editions

Review of 'How the hippies saved physics' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

In a word, ug.

Honestly, I was disappointed with the lack of physics. Aside from a solid explanation of the two slit experiment and Bell’s Theorem (which is used to assert quantum nonlocality), and the refutation of cloning quantum states there is very little here. This is not a book about physics, but a book about how the nature of philosophical questions about physics was preserved by the Fundamental Fysics Group (FFG), a group of disaffected from the mainstream physicists who tried their damnedest to use Bell’s Theorem as a basis for parapsychology, getting the CIA, DIA, and Erhard to foot the bill.

While I regard philosophical questions about physics to be of fundamental importance, but with all the book’s emphasis on Uri Geller’s “mental spoon bending” (were these people so easily duped?), EST seminars with LSD and naked coeds to attract physicists like Feynmann, and the lurid story of …

Subjects

  • Quantum theory
  • Counterculture
  • Physicists
  • Biography

Places

  • California
  • Berkeley