Introduction
More than forty years have passed since I first became interested in the problem of quantum gravity. During that time, there have been many diversions and, perhaps, some advances. Certainly, the naively optimistic approaches have long been laid to rest, and the schemes that remain have achieved some degree of stability. The original “canonical” program evolved into loop quantum gravity, which has become one of the two major approaches. The other, of course, is string theory—a scheme whose roots lie in the old Veneziano model of hadronic interactions, but whose true value became apparent only after it had been reconceived as a theory of quantum gravity.
However, notwithstanding these hard-won developments, certain issues in quantum gravity transcend any of the current schemes. These involve deep problems of both a mathematical and a philosophical kind and stem from a fundamental paradigm clash between general relativity—the apotheosis of classical physics—and quantum physics.
In general relativity, spacetime “itself” is modeled by a differentiable manifold M, a set whose elements are interpreted as “spacetime points.” The curvature tensor of the pseudo-Riemannian metric on M is then deemed to represent the gravitational field. As a classical theory, the underlying philosophical interpretation is realist: both the spacetime and its points truly “exist,” as does the gravitational field.