Brian Greene Quotes
Top 73 wise famous quotes and sayings by Brian Greene
Brian Greene Famous Quotes & Sayings
Discover top inspirational quotes from Brian Greene on Wise Famous Quotes.
For string theory to make sense, the universe should have nine spacial dimensions and one time dimension, for a total of ten dimensions.
The fact that I don't have any particular need for religion doesn't mean that I have a need to cast religion aside the way some of my colleagues do.
I've spent something like 17 years working on a theory for which there is essentially no direct experimental support.
A watch worn by a particle of light would not tick at all. Light realizes the dreams of Ponce de Leon and the cosmetics industry: it doesn't age.
Most scientists like to operate in the context of economy. If you don't need an explanatory principle, don't invoke it.
I think the appropriate response for a physicist is: 'I do not find the concept of God very interesting, because I cannot test it.'
We know that if supersymmetric particles exist, they must be very heavy; otherwise we would have spotted them by now.
You should never be surprised by or feel the need to explain why any physical system is in a high entropy state.
My view is that you don't tell the universe what to do. The universe is how it is, and it's our job to figure it out.
But, as Einstein once said, "For we convinced physicists, the distinction between past, present, and future is only an illusion, however persistent."5
We're on this planet for the briefest of moments in cosmic terms, and I want to spend that time thinking about what I consider the deepest questions.
The real reason why general relativity is widely accepted is because it made predictions that were borne out by experimental observations.
Far from being accidental details, the properties of nature's basic building blocks are deeply entwined with the fabric of space and time.
String theory is not the only theory that can accommodate extra dimensions, but it certainly is the one that really demands and requires it.
Free will is the sensation of making a choice. The sensation is real, but the choice seems illusory. Laws of physics determine the future.
Our eyes only see the big dimensions, but beyond those there are others that escape detection because they are so small.
My best teachers were not the ones who knew all the answers, but those who were deeply excited by questions they couldn't answer.
The real question is whether all your pondering and analyses will convince you that life is worth living. That's what it all comes down to.
There's no way that scientists can ever rule out religion, or even have anything significant to say about the abstract idea of a divine creator.
How, in looser language, does the part of the probability wave in Andromeda, and everywhere else, "know" to drop to zero simultaneously?19
I may be a Jewish scientist, but I would be tickled silly if one day I were reincarnated as a Baptist preacher.
There's a picture of my dorm room in the college yearbook as the most messy, most disgusting room on the Harvard campus, where I was an undergraduate.
I can't stand clutter. I can't stand piles of stuff. And whenever I see it, I basically just throw the stuff away.
Physics grapples with the largest questions the universe presents. 'Where did the totality of reality come from?' 'Did time have a beginning?'
What makes a Beethoven symphony spectacular, what makes a Brahms rhapsody spectacular is that the patterns are wondrous.
The boldness of asking deep questions may require unforeseen flexibility if we are to accept the answers.
Over the centuries, monumental upheavals in science have emerged time and again from following the leads set out by mathematics.
I do feel strongly that string theory is our best hope for making progress at unifying gravity and quantum mechanics.
Assessing existence while failing to embrace the insights of modern physics would be like wrestling in the dark with an unknown opponent.
Physicists have come to realize that mathematics, when used with sufficient care, is a proven pathway to truth.
The pinpoints of starlight we see with the naked eye are photons that have been streaming toward us for a few years or a few thousand.
Quantum mechanics - the physics of our world - requires that you hold such pedestrian complaints in abeyance.
There may have been many big bangs, one of which created our universe. The other bangs created other universes.
Sometimes attaining the deepest familiarity with a question is our best substitute for actually having the answer.
For me it's been very exciting to contribute to the public's understanding of how rich and wondrous science is.
The skyscraper is but a physical realization of the information contained in the architect's design.
When kids look up to great scientists the way they do to great musicians and actors, civilization will jump to the next level
How can a speck of a universe be physically identical to the great expanse we view in the heavens above?
A unified theory would put us at the doorstep of a vast universe of things that we could finally explore with precision.
Falsifiability for a theory is great, but a theory can still be respectable even if it is not falsifiable, as long as it is verifiable.
Physicists are more like avant-garde composers, willing to bend traditional rules ... Mathematicians are more like classical composers.
My view is that science only has something to say about a very particular notion of God, which goes by the name of 'god of the gaps'.
The number of e-mails and letters that I get from choreographers, from sculptors, from composers who are being inspired by science is huge.
In the Inflationary Multiverse, our universe could well be an island oasis in a gigantic but largely inhospitable cosmic archipelago.
The idea that there could be other universes out there is really one that stretches the mind in a great way.