Is
there a Universe?
Is there a Universe? Bafflingly, scientific
cosmologists, from Einstein to Hawking, have invariably failed to face
up to this question. This is all the more curious because some of them
have claimed to know that the universe can only be such as prescribed by
their theories. Some even claimed that their expertise enables them to
create, in theory at least, entire universes literally out of nothing.
For their strange attitudes toward the universe,
this greatest object of empirical human inquiry, scientists have not been
taken to task by philosophers. No wonder. The universe has become orphaned
by modern philosophy.
In this book the author, a renowned historian
and philosopher of science, and especially of astronomy and cosmology,
probes into this puzzling state of affairs. He also points out that slighting
the question, Is there a Universe?, has serious consequences for science
as well as for philosophy, to say nothing of theology. Most importantly,
he shows that it is possible to answer the question, Is there a Universe?,
in a convincingly demonstrative way.