Walter Cassani: "Albert was right: God doesn't play dice!"

iEd. Demetrapagg. 474 So how do you start talking about this book? Let's start by saying that I am also passionate about Physics, among other things.

They are among those enthusiasts who, when they can, read a book on Physics to study in depth some concepts studied at the University or to browse among the new discoveries of subatomic physics.

I am not an expert so I try to avoid mathematical treatment because it is generally very complex even though I know that to understand certain concepts thoroughly the mathematical part should be deepened.

Several years ago, in the 2001 to be precise, I read this book for the first time and was deeply impressed by the simplicity with which the concepts of classical physics were told and explained but also by the apparent simplicity with which the author introduced the his new theory of everything, which he called the Wavering Theory of the Field. At the end of that first reading I added in pencil a very narrow comment: "to read again!"

The idea was to read it again as soon as possible, perhaps deepening the concepts by reading other texts on the topics dealt with, but this was not the case. This summer, rearranging the bookcase, I came across Cassani's book again and so, almost by chance, I opened the page where I had left the comment and from there to decide that the time had finally come for the second reading only a moment passed. I took the book and added it to the pile of those in reading that then amounted to at five. In August his turn finally arrived and so, a few days ago, I finished the second reading and I added a sentence of comment immediately after the one left thirteen years ago: "Intuitively convincing in many parts!". effects is just so.

In the exposition of his theory, Walter Cassani goes through the history of discoveries and theories in vogue over time and then explains his theory and his interpretation of experimental phenomena according to his theory. In this way it highlights the shortcomings of the other theories and tries to re-establish what in his opinion is missing in the Physics of the last hundred years, causality. Just causality, or rather the lack thereof, introduced with the acceptance of the Principle Heisemberg's Undetermination, in fact, according to the author, is the basis of the errors that brought physics down a dead-end street.

Cassani demonstrates a profound knowledge of Physics and a great will power in fighting with all his strength against established truths, placing himself against everything and everyone, in search of the theory of everything that can allow Physics, by restoring the principle of causality, to get out of what in his opinion is a dead end road that led physicists to introduce artificial structures like black holes to justify otherwise unexplained phenomena. I am not a physicist, so my opinion is that of a simple enthusiast but I still want give it: "Intuitively convincing, in many parts!" Now you are reading the text which in my opinion should be seriously investigated by the Official Physics, meanwhile I begin the third reading!

Alessandro Rugolo