Glad to hear. Could I be cheeky and ask that you defend your position?
I watched that lecture... as far lots of popular science (I will avoid the term I use for derision of 'pop science') goes, this one was very good indeed. Perhaps I am biased, because I am glad to see someone giving string theory the treatment it deserves- mockery.
Talking of string theory, that is exactley what I meant by my posts. String theory is in my eyes, a peculiar infection spreading in modern physics which would be remedied by a little philosophy. I can understand how my position might sound to someone perhaps already less acquainted with it, but perhaps I could do the taboo and say 'if you understood my position, you'd understand it'- Philosophy puts many questions and indeed the whole of science into a much deeper context, where more profound connections and significances may be pondered in order to explain and ultimatley realised, somewhat hermeneutically, from the 'instrumentalist' view of the purley scientific approach to physics that I hold. Of course, theories, which are what I say are always philosophical in physics, can be falsified and proved wrong, and from experiment in must be accepted that there is some sort of 'truth' to them, but ultimatley they can never be certain and are always philsophical. Philosophy, can also narrow one's mind quite usefully by training it to ask questions which have meaning and are of use... and that is why I say it would kill off string theory as the nonsense that it is, which has no meaning and no use. String theory, though, is perhaps less a question of philosophy and more the product of general infectious craze in physics, which because it is widespread, is respected and even more infectious and the fact it is lazy and rather stupid thinking becomes ignored, because it is presumed that scientists would not fall for such laziness or stupidity. I am not an expert on it (perhaps being an expert would be a disadvantage, insofar as I may become seduced) but I understand its general context in physics and its implications and why it has been accepted and I know enough to know that I don't want to waste my time becoming an expert on it... it is as if some physicists took the paradigm of schrodinger's thoughts and the paradigm of feynman diagrammes and thought the childish thought which plauges modern physics: 'what if? (insert something crazy and 'imaginative') ...' instead of 'let us suppose (insert something reasonable, which has some general reason behind it)... and then examine the implications.'
David Attenborough once told of his proffessor who dismissed a geological theory because there was no evidence for it, calling it 'moonshine'. On reflection, from simply looking at a map I believe it was worth consideration, and it was simple and... as a good initial test for a scientific theory... it didn't involve eleven dimensions, so it was probably worth considering a little. But Attenborough should be carefull that he doesn't insult his proffessor's attitude- at least he said he would wait for evidence. I too, will wait for evidence. But I will not be 'open minded' for fear of being wrong, nor will I be close minded out of conservativism (which is what his proffessor was). Because to adopt open mindedness out of fear of being wrong, is to accept absurdity as possible simply because in the past other have been close minded and proven wrong. But there is a big difference between being rational and close minded. Besides, as I pointed out, many people have been recorded falsley as being close minded, when in fact they may have been correct. So, until any evidence or any more rationality is introduced into the field of string theory, it is no more than 'moonshine' and I look forward to being proved wrong.
''To go wrong in one's own way is better than to go right in another's.'' Dostoevsky's Razumihin.