Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part I Fundamental ideas and general formalisms
- 1 Unfinished revolution
- 2 The fundamental nature of space and time
- 3 Does locality fail at intermediate length scales?
- 4 Prolegomena to any future Quantum Gravity
- 5 Spacetime symmetries in histories canonical gravity
- 6 Categorical geometry and the mathematical foundations of Quantum Gravity
- 7 Emergent relativity
- 8 Asymptotic safety
- 9 New directions in background independent Quantum Gravity
- Questions and answers
- Part II String/M-theory
- Part III Loop quantum gravity and spin foam models
- Part IV Discrete Quantum Gravity
- Part V Effective models and Quantum Gravity phenomenology
- Index
6 - Categorical geometry and the mathematical foundations of Quantum Gravity
from Part I - Fundamental ideas and general formalisms
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part I Fundamental ideas and general formalisms
- 1 Unfinished revolution
- 2 The fundamental nature of space and time
- 3 Does locality fail at intermediate length scales?
- 4 Prolegomena to any future Quantum Gravity
- 5 Spacetime symmetries in histories canonical gravity
- 6 Categorical geometry and the mathematical foundations of Quantum Gravity
- 7 Emergent relativity
- 8 Asymptotic safety
- 9 New directions in background independent Quantum Gravity
- Questions and answers
- Part II String/M-theory
- Part III Loop quantum gravity and spin foam models
- Part IV Discrete Quantum Gravity
- Part V Effective models and Quantum Gravity phenomenology
- Index
Summary
Introduction
The mathematical structure of a theory is a very abstract collection of assumptions about the nature of the sphere of phenomena the theory studies. Given the great cultural gap which has opened between mathematics and physics, it is all too easy for these assumptions to become unconscious.
General Relativity (GR) is a classical theory. Its mathematical foundation is a smooth manifold with a pseudometric on it. This entails the following assumptions.
(i) Spacetime contains a continuously infinite set of pointlike events which is independent of the observer.
(ii) Arbitrarily small intervals and durations are well defined quantities. They are either simultaneously measurable or must be treated as existing in principle, even if unmeasurable.
(iii) At very short distances, special relativity becomes extremely accurate, because spacetime is nearly flat.
(iv) Physical effects from the infinite set of past events can all affect an event in their future, consequently they must all be integrated over.
The problem of the infinities in Quantum General Relativity is intimately connected to the consequences of these assumptions.
In my experience, most relativists do not actually believe these assumptions to be reasonable. Nevertheless, any attempt to quantize relativity which begins with a metric on a three or four dimensional manifold, a connection on a manifold, or strings moving in a geometric background metric on a manifold, is in effect making them.
Philosophically, the concept of a continuum of points is an idealization of the principles of classical physics applied to the spacetime location of events.
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- Approaches to Quantum GravityToward a New Understanding of Space, Time and Matter, pp. 84 - 98Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
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