In More than Nothing, Aaron Wright brings us to one of the great transformations of modern physics: the shift from seeing the void as pure absence to depicting the vacuum as a teeming structure of virtual particles and spacetime curvature. From the early twentieth to the early twenty-first century, physicists have developed practices, paper machinery, so to speak, to sort out why objects move, splinter, collide as they do: Feynman, Minkowski, Penrose diagrams, and other techniques fill the toolbox of abstract thought. Wright shows us how the story of the vacuum is one that captures what theoretical physicists have framed as the most fundamental entities in the universe