Yesterday we challenged the veracity of all blanket statements.
Today, we’re going to dismiss gravity.
An article in the New York Times describes the fulminations of a physicist named Erik Verlinde, who has denounced gravity and wants to remove it from its exalted position as one of the four fundamental forces governing all objects, giving it a reduced role as a mere sidekick to the laws of thermodynamics.
Holy demotion, Batman!
First Pluto was diminished from planet status to the lesser realm of large speeding chunks. Now gravity is at risk of being dropped from the four-headed pantheon of fundamentals, leaving only the strong nuclear force, the weak nuclear force and electromagnetism as the invisible sheriffs in our universal town.
The article quotes Dr. Verlinde in a talk given “to a bunch of physicists,” in which he likens “the unfolding story of gravity” to the tale about the emperor’s new clothes.
“We’ve known for a long time gravity doesn’t exist,” Dr. Verlinde said, “It’s time to yell it.”
Verlinde’s comments about gravity are hailed as genius by people who admit they don’t understand what he’s saying. This reminds me of the way art mavens enthuse over the latest unexplainable painting because the work is ground breaking and the artist is brilliant, even though they have no idea what any of it is about.
That’s me. I’m completely with Dr. Verlinde on this gravity thing, even though he baffles me. Why would I get on board with such a wild idea? I can only describe it in a short, sing-songy, completely weightless poem.
What goes up must come down.
So we thought for all.
But if we want to fly around,
Gravity must fall.Beat it up and take its lunch
Kick sand in its face.
Drop it with a sucker punch.
And leave it in disgrace.Gravity, your song is sung.
You’re finished as a force.
And once you have dropped down a rung
We’ll conquer you, of course.
George Jetson, here we come!
Once gravity is thoroughly humiliated, how might things change?


