Fascinating and <b>rather beautiful</b> . . . Physicists want their objective, real world back. Adam Forrest Kay shows that <b>there might be one way they can have it</b>
- Philip Ball, TLS
Energetically written in short chapters interspersed with digressions into other episodes of scientific wrongturnings, ESCAPE FROM SHADOW PHYSICS is <b>consistently interesting</b> . . . Mr. Kay <b>rightly highlights the limitations of current physics</b>
- Andrew Crumey, Wall Street Journal
Artfully written . . . <b>Kay's knowledge of physics history is exquisite </b>. . . ESCAPE FROM SHADOW PHYSICS offers a splendid history of classical and quantum physics as well as a convincing exposition of hydrodynamic quantum analogues
- Paul Halpern, Science
<b>Precise and seductive</b> . . . I could gladly spend a year - or at least an academic semester - with this book
- Rebecca Coffey, Forbes
A <b>singular addition</b> to the popular literature on quantum interpretations
- Jim Baggott, Physics World
Whatever you think of Kay's efforts to overturn the Copenhagen Interpretation of quantum mechanics and to justify Einstein by re-establishing classical norms of causality and determinism, his history of the whole wave/particle debate from ancient Greece onwards is <b>authoritative and encyclopaedic </b>- and intriguingly suggests that the purely scientific arguments were in part outweighed by an element of the straightforwardly human
- Michael Frayn, author of Copenhagen
Adam Kay has written a rollicking account of the history of science - and human intellectual folly. Rare in its irreverence towards the hallowed ground of quantum foundations, <i>Escape from Shadow Physics</i> is <b>a must-read</b> for quantum dissidents
- John Bush, Professor of Applied Mathematics, MIT,
Adam Forrest Kay has accomplished a real <i>tour de force</i>: he has covered almost the entire history of science to illustrate the failure of instrumentalist or positivist approaches. This leads him to a radical critique of the current dominant view of quantum physics, known as the Copenhagen interpretation. Kay's critique is based in part on the pilot-wave theory and the hydrodynamic quantum analogues. <b>This book will be a landmark in the history and philosophy of physics</b>
- Jean Bricmont, theoretical physicist and author, with Alan Sokal, of Intellectual Impostures
<b>Reads like a novel</b>, in which the biographies of major physical concepts are intertwined with the biographies of the great minds that shaped them. The reader will be surprised by the clarity of Kay's arguments
- Ana Maria Cetto, author of The Emerging Quantum and winner of the 2023 UNESCO Kalinga Prize for the Popularisation of Science
Adam Kay has written a book that<b> lays out with great clarity the central issue in modern physics</b>: are quantum-mechanical probabilities quite different in nature from all the others in physics and life? The reader will enjoy fascinating details from a great sweep of history and Kay's skill in explaining key technical facts with enviable simplicity
- Julian Barbour, author of The Janus Point
In the bouncing groove of an oil droplet, Adam Forrest Kay finds a new way to look at quantum mechanics - one that replaces randomness and mystery with new knowledge. Supported by a brilliantly told history and philosophy of physics,<b> this book will change how you think</b> about the field's past. And it may just set a new path for its future
- Stephon Alexander, author of Fear of a Black Universe