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DIY Physics: It’s Not Brain Surgery

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What’s the Big Idea?


“Your Gravity Theory Sucks!” Margaret Wertheim was surprised to find this comment on an order form for a self-published book called The Other Theory of Physics, written by James Carter, a trailer-park owner in Enumclaw, WA. Unlike other so-called “outsider physicists” she had encountered, apparently Carter had a sense of humor. 

Carter also seemed to have a healthy ego. After all, Carter proposed a complete alternative theory of physics, lashing out against what he called “the virus” of quantum theory, “a basket of abstractions that had mired the science in a mathematical abyss.” In his alternative theory of everything, Carter explained concepts such as gravity and matter, the periodic table and the creation of the universe through “wildly creative ideas dreamed up during a life spent as a gold miner and abalone diver.”

Jim Carter’s periodic table showing the circlon-based structure of each element.

According to Wertheim, Carter was at least in part a product of his rebellious times. In 1974, just as the Sex Pistols unleashed “their brand of anarchy as an inspiration to unschooled genius everywhere,” Wertheim writes, “Jim Carter was channeling the ethos of the time through the lens of theoretical physics, mounting a one-man assault on the foundations of science with the hubris of a King’s Road punk.”

Wertheim, who tells the story of outsider science in her new book Physics on the Fringeexplains the phenomenon as a reaction to the fact that mainstream physics theories have become so highly technical that they have become inaccessible to almost everybody, even trained physicists. 

Watch the video here:

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