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368 pages, Paperback
First published November 26, 2002

[Consider] the central importance of the constants of Nature characterizing gravity (G), quantum reality (h), and light (c). We can use them to paint a simple picture of the correspondences between different laws of Nature. We need only to appreciate a simple principle. When G is set to zero we are turning off the force of gravity and ignoring it; when h is set to zero we are ignoring the quantum nature of the Universe, through which energies can only take on particular values, like steps on a ladder. The size of the steps between the rungs are fixed by h. If h were zero there would be no gaps and the energy of an atom could change by any value, no matter how small. Third, when c is set equal to infinity (or, what is the same thing, 1/c equal to zero) then light signals move with infinite speed. This was the picture in Newton’s day, with gravity acting instantaneously between the Earth and the Sun.
we see a trend in our own technological societies towards the fabrication of smaller and smaller machines that consume less and less energy and produce almost no waste. Taken to its logical conclusion, we expect advanced life-forms to be as small as the laws of physics allow...we might mention that this could explain why there is no evidence of extraterrestrial life in the Universe. If it is truly advanced, even by our standards, it will most likely be very small, down to the molecular scale. All sorts of advantages then accrue. There is lots of room there – huge populations can be sustained. Powerful, intrinsically quantum computation can be harnessed. Little raw material is required and space travel is easier. You can also avoid being detected by civilizations of clumsy bipeds living on bright planets that beam continuous radio noise into interplanetary space.” (p.170)