This Week In Science’s own Dr.Kiki interviews world renowned physicist Michio Kaku
Dr Kiki Interviews Michio Kaku on the Topic of God
Published: May 14, 2010Posted in: z-Science-Videos
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Thanks for the interview Kirsten. I hope you’ll be able to have Michio back on the TWIS to talk about current LHC results.
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Your regular listener from Ukraine, Odessa.
Thanks Dr. KIKI, I enjoyed the interview but where can I find the whole video or audio ? can you tell me which podcast to download ?
Erfan
Kaku, as usual, is being dishonest when he takes credit for contributing the equation for string field theory!
Light-cone string field theories were introduced by Stanley Mandelstam and developed by Mandelstam, Michael Green, John Schwarz and Lars Brink. An explicit description of the second-quantization of the light-cone string was given by Michio Kaku and Keiji Kikkawa. (From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/String_field_theory)
kiki interviews kaku…really?
most physicists don’t believe in god but they like to dance around the question for some reason.Do you believe in god it is a simple yes no answer. nobody is going to crucify you if you don’t or do so stop billsh?ting..
There is no God. There are mathematics that manage everything in a godlike manner. Man invented god and math was already there everywhere around him to begin with.
Interesting. In search of the truth I’ve come to believe in a God, who (like Michio Kaku and Einstein propose) is passive at the moment. I’ve come to my current position mostly because of the question ‘where did it start?’ Many scientists (recently Stephen Hawkins) have stated that the genesis of the universe can be supported by formulae alone but one can always delve deeper – where did IT start?
Anyway that’s my take on the subject atm.
Here here to… Menkeechang Posted November 28, 2010 at 4:46 PM
The universe doesn’t use or need mathematics or gods to exist… both are man made… both are tools
@Mic Well, if you are going to go to the where did IT come from … Oh, you mean where did the universe/singularity come from I thought you meant where did God come from.
@ Jacksonfly I would not say man invented math – he/she may have invented a way of expressing the relationships between things – but not invented the relationship. Did man invent 2+2=4? We might have defined the symbols and could have used a different symbol for representing four. It is like politicians trying to re-define pi as 3.1 or 3.2 just because – now that is inventing math.
I am currently in a meeting and have not had the chance to listen to this paticularly afresh podcast. I can at least say that Michio Kaku is my favorite theorectical physicist, however, I have not seen anything that he has created or has taken ownership of. Despite his lack of orginiality, he is great in his succint interviews and provides some amazing thoughts on the future. Some mentioned string theory but did not list Ed Witten as one of the brilliant minds of its origination. If anyone has any other great sites please reply, I have just discovered this site, and so far, I love it and welcome more.
Frankly, the mention of “God” offends me, and so does Michio Kaku.
I don’t know which is worse.
His books full of bad science fiction in the guise of futurology, or his self-important egotism.
Can you take him off the homepage carousel?
It hurts me every time he pops up.
Maybe put up a picture of honey badger!
Honey badger don’t care.
As this is a freewheeling dicussion on whether or not God exists, I’d like to throw in some thought provoker for those who don’t believe in God. The universe is the hardware. God is the almighty software that is not restricted by time and space. And the source of power to make them work is the interaction between matter and anti matter.
LOL @ Saut, nice childish fantasy you dreamed up. I’ve read your little paragraph of nonsense, now you got read The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins. See how that tastes.