Monthly Archives: December 2010

Ancient History

Sometime around now is the tenth anniversary of my first foray into the business of public criticism of string theory. I wrote something up over the end-of-year holiday in 2000, and circulated it by e-mail to a list of prominent … Continue reading

Posted in Not Even Wrong: The Book | 50 Comments

Short Items

The Tevatron last week passed the milestone of 10 inverse femtobarns of luminosity delivered to the experiments. That’s about 1.5 quadrillion collisions. Presentations from the Simons Center Inaugural Conference, discussed here, are now on-line. Luis Alvarez-Gaume and John Ellis discuss … Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | 18 Comments

HEP News

Besides the dramatic new CMS results mentioned in the last two postings, there’s other news from the high-energy frontier as it moves from Illinois to Geneva. Earlier this week the MCTP hosted a workshop on LHC First Data. Today at … Continue reading

Posted in Experimental HEP News | 10 Comments

String Theory Fails Another Test, the “Supertest”

Wednesday’s CMS result finding no black holes in early LHC data has led to internet headlines such as String Theory Fails First Major Experimental Test (for what this really means, see here). At a talk today at CERN, yet another … Continue reading

Posted in Experimental HEP News | 35 Comments

Physicists Finally Find a Way to Test Superstring Theory

More than ten years ago, the New York Times ran a story explaining that Physicists Finally Find a Way to Test Superstring Theory. At the time, the test was scheduled to start in 2005-6: In fact, it might be possible … Continue reading

Posted in Experimental HEP News | 27 Comments

This Week’s Hype

This week’s contribution to the long tradition of universities issuing press releases hyping non-existent “experimental tests of string theory” by their employees is from Duke University, which advertises “String Theory in a Lab“. This is based on a paper that … Continue reading

Posted in This Week's Hype | 30 Comments

Math Research Institute, Art, Politics, Transgressive Sex and Geometric Langlands

I learned from a colleague last night about recent events bringing together the topics of the title of this posting, something that one wouldn’t have thought was possible. Last Wednesday there was a showing in Berkeley of Edward Frenkel’s short … Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | 25 Comments