Philosophy Magazine

Cosmology and the Future of Spacetime

By Wuthrich

The Rotman Institute of Philosophy is hosting a conference on Cosmology and the Future of Spacetime on June 12-14, 2017, in London, Ontario.  All are welcome to attend, but we ask those interested in joining us to register for planning purposes. The conference is held in conjunction with the LMP conference, on June 15-16th.  Below the fold is a more detailed description of the conference theme.

Even though general relativity has enjoyed profound success throughout the century since its discovery, there are at least two reasons to think that it may have to undergo small, albeit possibly profound, revisions. One reason, essentially uncontroversial, is the open problem of how to unify general relativity with quantum theory, while the second reason, essentially controversial, regards whether certain dynamical anomalies in astronomy and cosmology are best explained in terms of new, otherwise undetected forms of matter, or in terms of a modification of gravitational theory.

We will explore these two themes from a more specific angle. In particular, the conference speakers will address the issue of “spacetime emergence” within certain approaches to quantum gravity in a cosmological setting. If, as is usually taken to be the case, general relativity breaks down as a classical initial singularity is approached, what could this mean for the view of spacetime as emergent in the early universe? Does the thermodynamic arrow of time require treating initial and final singularities differently and thereby impose fundamental constraints on the structure of a future theory of quantum gravity? More generally, what could in principle even be meant by a physical theory without at least some underlying notion of spacetime?

Similarly, if the path is pursued of modifying general relativity (MOND, TeVeS, f(R), torsion, etc.) in order to avoid the new forms of matter and/or energy that the cosmological concordance model posits, what does this mean for the lessons about matter, motion, gravity and spacetime that Einstein taught us? We will also consider recent work that clarifies the space of alternatives to general relativity, in order to assess the viability of proposals to emulate general relativity’s success at length scales where it has passed stringent tests, while differing at cosmological scales.

The conference is supported by the John Templeton Foundation, the Rotman Institute of Philosophy, and the Department of Logic and Philosophy of Science at UC Irvine, and organized by Chris Smeenk and Jim Weatherall.

Confirmed Speakers:

Niayesh Afshordi (University of Waterloo, Perimeter Institute)

Tessa Baker (University of Oxford)

Robert Brandenberger (McGill University)

Karen Crowther (University of Geneva)

Henrique Gomes (Perimeter Institute)

Nick Huggett (University of Illinois at Chicago)

Anna Ijjas (Princeton University)

Dennis Lehmkuhl (Caltech)

Michela Massimi (University of Edinburgh)

Daniele Oriti (Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics – Albert Einstein Institute)

Lee Smolin (Perimeter Institute)

Francesca Vidotto (Institute for Mathematics, Astrophysics and Particle Physics – Radboud University Nijmegen)

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