I dont know. This review doesnt sit right with me. A couple of points:
"Lawrence M. Krauss, a well-known cosmologist and prolific popular-science writer, apparently means to announce to the world, in this new book, that the laws of quantum mechanics have in them the makings of a thoroughly scientific and adamantly secular explanation of why there is something rather than nothing. Period. Case closed."
"Where, for starters, are the laws of quantum mechanics themselves supposed to have come from? Krauss is more or less upfront, as it turns out, about not having a clue about that. He acknowledges (albeit in a parenthesis, and just a few pages before the end of the book) that everything he has been talking about simply takes the basic principles of quantum mechanics for granted. “I have no idea if this notion can be usefully dispensed with,” he writes, “or at least I don’t know of any productive work in this regard.”
So the claim in the very opening paragraph is blatantly wrong. Okay...? Krauss isn't claiming total knowledge here, more speculative or working knowledge
"He complains that “some philosophers and many theologians define and redefine ‘nothing’ as not being any of the versions of nothing that scientists currently describe,” and that “now, I am told by religious critics that I cannot refer to empty space as ‘nothing,’ but rather as a ‘quantum vacuum,’ to distinguish it from the philosopher’s or theologian’s idealized ‘nothing,’ ” and he does a good deal of railing about “the intellectual bankruptcy of much of theology and some of modern philosophy.” But all there is to say about this, as far as I can see, is that Krauss is dead wrong and his religious and philosophical critics are absolutely right. Who cares what we would or would not have made a peep about a hundred years ago? We were wrong a hundred years ago. We know more now. And if what we formerly took for nothing turns out, on closer examination, to have the makings of protons and neutrons and tables and chairs and planets and solar systems and galaxies and universes in it, then it wasn’t nothing, and it couldn’t have been nothing, in the first place"
Now I could be wrong about this paragraph. I've read it a few times over, but I don't think they are disagreeing here. Albert is making the same point as Krauss.
He's talking about the idea of 'quantum vacuum' over the idealized 'nothing'. Quantum vacuum would be, as Albert describes earlier in the interview, as the absence of the a field. The arrangement of a field where there appears to be nothing (but we know, now, is just an arrangement, a temporary state of the field). Krauss himself states in his lecture that there is no true vacuum, just a kind of bubbling, boiling background of quantum fields popping in and out. These don't seem to be at odds. The "vacuum" shifts between there being fields and there being the absence of fields, like a wave and its trough.
The idealized 'nothing' would be the idea of totally zilch. No quantum fields, no nothing, a sort of In The Beginning state before anything.
The idealized nothing would have been what we thought was true before. We know now that something like a 'quantum vacuum' is more accurate. Again, I don't see how Albert is refuting or disagreeing with Krauss here, as Krauss clearly believes a quantum vacuum is more correct than the idealized nothing.
Again, I could be wrong, but that's my reading of it. I would like to read more on this though, just because it's seemed to pass me by. Now, I could go ahead and google a bunch of things, but my terms and articles I bring up are going to be vastly different than whatever context you saw them in. Which is why I was asking YOU to post content related to this matter, so I can get the context that YOU are reading it in, not some context-less aimless google searching hoping to hit a properly written article or refutation.