Dash, you are describing a de Broglie wave:
That is what an electron does within an atom which gives rise to the different energy states and orbital patterns. From looking at that picture, can you see how it could be helpful to think of the electron as a string rather than a dot? This does not mean that an electron is, in fact, a line rather than a dot. It's an electron. There are certain other applications where it's more helpful to think of the electron as a sheet rather than a line. This is sort of like the question of whether light is a particle or a wave. It has properties of both, and this gave rise to the idea of the photon. The truth of the matter is that the distinction isn't meaningful.
Protons and neutrons also have quantum numbers associated with them, and they too have wave properties, so it becomes helpful for certain applications to look at them as lines rather than dots.
Everything else is just pouring on more and more math. Now, that might be useful as far as understanding what's going on, provided you have a strong enough math background to follow along, but it doesn't change the fundamental idea behind string theory: Conceptualizing the universe as being made up of something other than dots. Saying a string or a brane is real is misleading. I could say that rectangles are real because my laptop screen is a rectangle. That's disingenuous. My laptop screen has the shape of a rectangle, and therefore all of the math associated with rectangles works for doing calculations regarding my laptop screen. It does not actually make "rectangle" a real thing. The rectangle is a mathematical model. My laptop screen is the real thing. "Rectangle" is the model that allows me to study laptop screens, tables, boxes, and shelves without having to invent four different forms of math.
Rorinthas wrote:
If you read Timeline (as opposed to watching the crappy movie), The author points out as the end of the 1800s pulled around that people thought "We knew everything about everything." That the corners of the scientific map were more or less drawn out. Then we discovered electrons, and all the great innovation of the next century that built on that. So excuse me if I don't consider the scientific account complete.
Actually, even when Albert Michelson said that, all of his contemporaries knew he was wrong. Then, within a few short years, a different Albert published a paper that opened up the floodgates. Ever since, the idea that we've discovered everything there is to discover has been regarded as preposterous. Society would be in a much better place if religions took a similar mentality.
Talya wrote:
And yet the lines don't make the universe make more sense, or easier to predict. Thinking of atoms as dots still provides the only way for us to make use of those atoms, and still provides the only methods of making predictions on the behavior of those atoms. String Theory has done NOTHING to assist scientists in understanding the universe. It's simply a big "What if?" scenario.
I'm not the first one to make such an accusation, and people more educated in the field than any of us have admitted it. This is why scientists like Mathematical Physicist
Peter Woit have described String Theory as nothing more than "science fiction modeled in mathematical terms."
If we want to bring quotes by famous scientists into the mix, Richard Feynman is purported to have said that theoretical physicists are physicists who lack the skill to perform real experiments, while mathematical physicists are mathematicians who lack the skill to perform real mathematics. The guy doesn't like string theory, and thinks that funding should be going to researching other models. Well, he's got a point. If string theory looks like it's a dead-end, other avenues do need to be explored. Saying string theory is a dead end, it's going nowhere, and we need to pursue other ideas is a fair statement. Which, from looking over Peter Woit's wiki article and blog, seems to be the crux of his argument.
The statement that it does nothing to assist scientists in understanding the universe is hyperbole, and to say it gives no method of making predictions is demonstrably false. I cited two examples in a previous post where we use core ideas from string theory. Neither one resembles high-brow notions of the shape and composition of the universe, and instead call to mind more mundane occupations such as plumbers and electricians. That's the rub. It may not be useful to particle physicists trying to figure out gravity, but it has been useful to other disciplines. You are being just as myopic as some of the proponents of string theory. Of course, you at least have an excuse.
When people talk about string theory, they start looking at all the crap that's been piled on top of it rather than the underlying premise of using lines rather than dots to build the universe out of. I'm not suggesting that the multiple universe idea is rock solid, and quite frankly, I'm not sure how we get there from using lines instead of dots. People are making wilder and crazier hypotheses based off of something that's never been tested in a lab. Is it time to knock that **** off, rein people back in, and run some tests? Yes, it is.
At any rate, the question of whether string theory is useful is a separate question from whether it's falsifiable, and whether it matters if it's falsifiable. It's also a separate issue from completeness. Religion provides a "complete" account of the creation of the universe. It's not much good for making accurate predictions, but it's complete. The Flood doesn't help scientists understand **** about the universe, but it's complete. Something can be both complete and wrong. In fact, it's a whole lot easier than finding something that's complete and correct, which is why we keep looking as religions spring up and die out around us.