Thursday, August 14, 2014

the theory of decoherence

Max Tegmark: Yes, I absolutely agree with that.

Futura-Sciences:  But you're going even further than Plato affirming that everything in our universe is actually a mathematical structure. This hypothesis is also falsifiable for you because it is possible that future scientific developments lead us to discover that some phenomena can not be completely reduced to pure mathematical structures.

http://androidstars.newsvine.com/_news/2014/08/05/25184677-two-separate-species-by-the-wallace-line
http://androidgeek.ucoz.com/blog/right_to_be_forgotten_google_in_trouble_with_the_flood_of_requests/2014-08-06-13
http://carmiell.blogspot.com/2014/08/video-two-tourists-on-back-of-whale.html

Max Tegmark: Right. One of the great puzzles that has not yet found a scientific solution of the phenomenon of consciousness. The philosopher David Chalmers called hard problem of consciousness ( Hard problem of consciousness ), the problem of explaining the fact that we have qualitative phenomenal experiences. It might finally be amenable to any explanation that would only consider mathematical structures. This is an example of one of insurmountable obstacles we might encounter that would disprove my hypothesis of a mathematical universe.

Born in 1951, the Polish-born physicist Wojciech Zurzek is the author of major works on the theory of quantum information. He was responsible for the theory of decoherence and a demonstration of the famous impossibility theorem of quantum cloning. © University of Waterloo

Futura-Sciences:  You were still a masters student at the University of Berkeley in 1991 when you rediscovered independently of Wojciech Zurek and Hans Dieter Zeh, the theory of decoherence, which solves the riddle of the paradox of the cat Schrödinger \.

No comments:

Post a Comment