In the eloquent musings of Bayo Akomolafe, quantum physics emerges not merely as a scientific discipline but as a profound poetic unraveling of the cosmos' secret dance. He sees it as the enigmatic study of the minuscule, where particles breathe in realms beyond the straightforward grasp of Newtonian predictability. Here, the lines blur between solidity and specter, causality and haunting randomness, evoking a reverence for the unnameable interconnectedness that defies neat formalities. Quantum physics, in his view, is less a quest for definitive answers and more an invitation to sit with the mystery, to recognize the strange loops of entanglement, and to honor the universe's playful refusal to be pinned into linear logic. It is an alchemical symphony where the observer and the observed conspire in a ceaseless, intimate ballet, whispering secrets through the folds of uncertainty and potential.
See also: black bodies, white supremacy, late-stage capitalism, human being