Steven Weinberg (1933) American theoretical physicist
page 18, 2nd edition https://books.google.com/books?id=Qd0MEtsBr7oC&pg=PA18 <br class="br">Dreams of a Final Theory (1992; 2nd edition 1994)
"Newton's Principia" in 300 Years of Gravitation. (1987) by S. W. Hawking and W. Israel, p. 4
Steven Weinberg (1933) American theoretical physicist
page 18, 2nd edition https://books.google.com/books?id=Qd0MEtsBr7oC&pg=PA18 <br class="br">Dreams of a Final Theory (1992; 2nd edition 1994)
“Einstein's theory of relativity”
Hermann Weyl (1885–1955) German mathematician
From the Author's Preface to First Edition (1918)
Space—Time—Matter (1952)
Context: Einstein's theory of relativity has advanced our ideas of the structure of the cosmos a step further. It is as if a wall which separated us from Truth has collapsed. Wider expanses and greater depths are now exposed to the searching eye of knowledge, regions of which we had not even a presentiment. It has brought us much nearer to grasping the plan that underlies all physical happening.
Lee Smolin (1955) American cosmologist
"Loop Quantum Gravity," The New Humanists: Science at the Edge (2003)
George Gilder (1939) technology writer
Telecosm : How Infinite Bandwidth Will Revolutionize Our World (2000), p. 31
Context: Let there be light, says the Bible. All the firmaments of technology, all our computers and networks, are built with light, and of light, and for light, to hasten its spread around the world. Light glows on the telescom's periphery; it shines as its core; it illuminates its webs and its links. From Newton, Maxwell, and Einstein to Richard Feynman and Charles Townes, the more men have gazed at light, the more it turns out to be a phenomenon utterly different from anything else. And yet everything else — every atom and every molecula — is fraught with its oscillating intensity.
“Jesus could not have imagined such an idea as Albert Einstein's theory of relativity.”
John Shelby Spong (1931) American bishop
Source: Rescuing the Bible from Fundamentalism (1991), p. 25
“Einstein was confused, not the quantum theory.”
Stephen Hawking (1942–2018) British theoretical physicist, cosmologist, and author
Lecture at the Amsterdam Symposium on Gravity, Black Holes, and String Theory (21 June 1997)
Alan Guth (1947) American theoretical physicist and cosmologist
Lecture 1: Inflationary Cosmology: Is Our Universe Part of a Multiverse? Part I.
The Early Universe (2012)