Forks in the road, on the way to quantum gravity

Jun, 1997
29 pages
Published in:
  • Int.J.Theor.Phys. 36 (1997) 2759-2781
e-Print:
Report number:
  • SU-GP-93-12-2

Citations per year

1997200420112018202505101520
Abstract: (arXiv)
In seeking to arrive at a theory of ``quantum gravity'', one faces several choices among alternative approaches. I list some of these ``forks in the road'' and offer reasons for taking one alternative over the other. In particular, I advocate the following: the sum-over-histories framework for quantum dynamics over the ``observable and state-vector'' framework/ relative probabilities over absolute ones/ spacetime over space as the gravitational ``substance'' (4 over 3+1)/ a Lorentzian metric over a Riemannian (``Euclidean'') one/ a dynamical topology over an absolute one/ degenerate metrics over closed timelike curves to mediate topology-change/ ``unimodular gravity'' over the unrestricted functional integral/ and taking a discrete underlying structure (the causal set) rather than the differentiable manifold as the basis of the theory. In connection with these choices, I also mention some results from unimodular quantum cosmology, sketch an account of the origin of black hole entropy, summarize an argument that the quantum mechanical measurement scheme breaks down for quantum field theory, and offer a reason why the cosmological constant of the present epoch might have a magnitude of around 1012010^{-120} in natural units.
  • talk: College Park 1993/05/27
  • quantum gravity
  • gravitation: classical
  • quantization
  • kinematics
  • geometry
  • quantum cosmology
  • black hole: entropy
  • quantum mechanics: measurement
  • cosmological constant