| ▲ | XorNot a day ago | ||||||||||||||||
There is not a "huge chunk" of the theoretical physics community working on string theory, and their never was. For one, it is far less common a topic of research now then it was earlier when it was more popular, but even then "huge" was really "a lot of universities had a grant for string theory investigation because it looked promising". It mostly hasn't worked out and now people are moving on to other things. The single worst thing that happened though was the populism: a small group of people with credentials started putting out pop-sci books and doing interviews, well in excess of what their accomplishments should mean. People are like "so many people are working on this" because there were like, 3 to 5 guys who always said "yes" to an interview and talked authoritatively. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | gnfargbl a day ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Huge is a subjective term, but go and count the number of participants at Strings 2025 [1]. Then realise that is just one of many conferences [2]. It's still a very big field. [1] https://nyuad.shorthandstories.com/strings-conference-abu-dh... | |||||||||||||||||
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