Helgoland: Making Sense of the Quantum Revolution

Helgoland: Making Sense of the Quantum Revolution

2020 • 143 pages

Ratings23

Average rating3.8

15

Had I reviewed this closer to when I read the bulk of it, this review would have been more insightful. But a pity it is that this was not as easy to read as his last book (The Order of Time), and so I read this intermittently over the course of nearly a year.

The challenge I faced with this book is that in some sections (particularly Chapters 4 and 6) his train of thought becomes hard to follow. Some concepts and relations are repeated, I think that was intended for this new grammar of reality offered by quantum theory to be eventually absorbed, but not so effectively. Something could be lost in translation too.

There are some very important notions he wants delivered in this book though, so it does deserve a careful reading and comprehension in supplement to his earlier work (I would recommend reading The Order of Time before this, as that sets the foundation for the key ideas he elaborates here).

Politics, literature, history and philosophy are discussed in much of this book. There is an acknowledgment of the relevance of Eastern philosophy too, although he strongly rebukes the appropriation of quantum physics by contemporary schools of metaphysics.

I was captivated and engrossed in the first 3 chapters and in the last one he ends once again in a poetic outburst on his journey of learning and relaying the knowledge and comprehension he's had thus far in this field.

That said I will want to give this a second reading when I have time.