ABSTRACT

The great German mathematician David Hilbert’s creation, de facto, was—no, is—a theory of everything or world formula, even though he himself had little chance of fully realizing this. Even in physics, where we can now show that Hilbert’s fundamental equation covers both great theories, General Theory of Relativity and Quantum Theory, the time was not ripe for such a discovery, simply because the mathematical apparatus of Quantum Theory was not fully developed then. While Hilbert brought out his great work in 1915 and knew about the Einstein field equations at the time, the basic quantum equations such as the Schrödinger, Klein–Gordon, and Dirac equations would not follow before the second half of the 1920s.

In order to find the mathematical and physical fundament for the description of the body, the soul, and the whole universe, which is to say a "theory of everything," we think that we require "quantum gravity." That such a theory—in principle—already exists and was derived by Hilbert and elaborated in the author’s previous work, The World Formula: A Late Recognition of David Hilbert’s Stroke of Genius. This book digs deeper and shows not only that quantum gravity is more than just a physical theory—describing physical aspects—but also that, in fact, it covers "it all."

chapter |2 pages

Personal Motivation

chapter |23 pages

Some Fundamental Motivation

part |10 pages

The First Day: Let There Be Nothing

chapter Chapter 1|8 pages

Making Contact with Quantum Gravity

part |110 pages

The Second Day: Let There Be Photons

chapter Chapter 2|34 pages

Societons and Ecotons

chapter Chapter 4|28 pages

Social Distancing

part |201 pages

The Third Day: Let There Be Mass and Inertia

chapter Chapter 6|159 pages

Masses and the Infinity Options Principle

chapter Chapter 7|39 pages

The Three Generations of Elementary Particles

part |130 pages

The Fourth Day: Let There Be Quantum Gravity

chapter Chapter 8|128 pages

Toward Quantum Einstein Field Equations

part |193 pages

The Fifth Day: Let There Be a Dirac Equation

chapter Chapter 10|65 pages

The Dirac Miracle

part |180 pages

The Sixth Day: A Math for Body, Soul, and Universe

chapter Chapter 11|147 pages

A Curvy Math to Salvation

chapter Chapter 12|20 pages

About the Flatness Problem in Cosmology

part |5 pages

The Seventh Day: Give It Some Rest

chapter Chapter 14|3 pages

About the Origin of the Minimum Principle