SEAN CARROLL is a theoretical physicist at the California Institute of Technology, host of the Mindscape podcast, and author of From Eternity to Here, The Particle at the End of the Universe, and The Big Picture. He has been awarded prizes and fellowships by the National Science Foundation, NASA, the American Institute of Physics, and the Royal Society of London, among many others. He lives in Los Angeles with his wife, writer Jennifer Ouellette.
Praise for Something Deeply Hidden
“What makes Carroll's new project so worthwhile, though, is that
while he is most certainly choosing sides in the debate, he offers
us a cogent, clear and compelling guide to the subject while
letting his passion for the scientific questions shine through
every page.”—NPR
“The book presents one fascinating concept after another, and I
think it is an essential read. I’ve spent a lot of time thinking
about the implications of the Many Worlds and entanglement, and the
fact that our reality is always an infinite set of connected
possibilities. It’s really blown my mind. The deeper you dive into
quantum mechanics, the more it challenges you to keep an open mind
about everything.”—Dan Schulman, CEO of PayPal in Fast
Company
“Enlightening and refreshingly bold.”—Scientific American
“Something Deeply Hidden is Carroll’s ambitious and engaging foray
into what quantum mechanics really means and what it tells us about
physical reality.”—Science Magazine
“Carroll argues with a healthy restlessness that makes his book
more interesting than so many others in the quantum physics
genre.”—Forbes
“If you want to know why some people take [the Everett] approach
seriously and what you can do with it, then Carroll’s latest is one
of the best popular books on the market.”—Physics Today
“Be prepared to deal with some equations — and to have your mind
blown.”—Geek Wire
“By far the most articulate and cogent defense of the Many-Worlds
view in book-length depth with a close connection to the latest
ongoing research.”—Science News
"Solid arguments and engaging historical backdrop will captivate
science-minded readers everywhere.”—Scientific Inquirer
"As a smart and intensely readable undergraduate class in the
history of quantum theory and the nature of quantum mechanics,
Something Deeply Hidden could scarcely be improved."—Steve
Donoghue, Open Letters Monthly
“Readers in this universe (and others?) will relish the opportunity
to explore the frontiers of science in the company of
titans.”—Booklist
“Fans of popular science authors such as Neil deGrasse Tyson and
John Gribbin will find great joy while exploring these
groundbreaking concepts.”—Library Journal
“[A] challenging, provocative book... moving smoothly through
different topics and from objects as small as particles to those as
enormous as black holes, Carroll’s exploration of quantum theory
introduces readers to some of the most groundbreaking ideas in
physics today.”—Publishers Weekly
“A thrilling tour through what is perhaps humankind's greatest
intellectual achievement—quantum mechanics. With bold clarity,
Carroll deftly unmasks quantum weirdness to reveal a strange but
utterly wondrous reality.”—Brian Greene, professor of physics and
mathematics, director of the Columbia Center for Theoretical
Physics, author of The Elegant Universe
“Sean Carroll’s immensely enjoyable Something Deeply Hidden brings
readers face to face with the fundamental quantum weirdness of the
universe—or should I say universes? And by the end, you may
catch yourself finding quantum weirdness not all that
weird.”—Jordan Ellenberg, professor of mathematics, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, author of How Not To Be Wrong
“Sean Carroll is always lucid and funny, gratifyingly readable,
while still excavating depths. He advocates an acceptance of
quantum mechanics at its most minimal, its most austere – appealing
to the allure of the pristine. The consequence is an annihilation
of our conventional notions of reality in favor of an utterly
surreal world of Many Worlds. Sean includes us in the battle
between a simple reality versus a multitude of realities that feels
barely on the periphery of human comprehension. He includes us in
the ideas, the philosophy, and the foment of revolution. A
fascinating and important book.”—Janna Levin, professor of physics
& astronomy, Barnard College of Columbia University, author of
Black Hole Blues
“Sean Carroll beautifully clarifies the debate about the
foundations of quantum mechanics, and champions the most elegant,
courageous approach: the astonishing “many worlds” interpretation.
His explanations of its pros and cons are clear, evenhanded, and
philosophically gob smacking.”—Steven Strogatz, professor of
mathematics, Cornell University, and author of Infinite Powers
“Carroll gives us a front-row seat to the development of a new
vision of physics: one that connects our everyday experiences to a
dizzying hall-of-mirrors universe in which our very sense of self
is challenged. It's a fascinating idea, and one that just might
hold clues to a deeper reality.”—Katie Mack, theoretical
astrophysicist, North Carolina State University, author of The End
of Everything (forthcoming)
“I was overwhelmed by tears of joy at seeing so many fundamental
issues explained as well as they ever have been. Something
Deeply Hidden is a masterpiece, which stands along with Feynman's
QED as one of the two best popularizations of quantum mechanics
I've ever seen. And if we classify QED as having had
different goals, then it's just the best popularization of quantum
mechanics I've ever seen, full stop.”—Scott Aaronson, professor of
computer science at the University of Texas at Austin, and Director
of UT’s Quantum Information Center
“Irresistible and an absolute treat to read. While this is a book
about some of the deepest current mysteries in physics, it is also
a book about metaphysics as Carroll lucidly guides us on how to not
only think about the true and hidden nature of reality but also how
to make sense of it. I loved this book.”—Priyamvada
Natarajan, theoretical astrophysicist, Yale University, author of
Mapping the Heavens
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