Last updated over 1 year ago. What is this?

Jim Rutt defines "quantum mechanics" as the branch of physics that fundamentally reshapes our understanding of nature at the smallest scales, where classical mechanics no longer holds sway. Quantum mechanics deploys a mathematical framework to describe phenomena that occur at the atomic and subatomic levels, where particles like electrons exhibit both wave-like and particle-like properties. Rutt highlights its key principles, such as superposition, entanglement, and quantization, which challenge our intuitions about reality and locality. According to him, this field not only revolutionizes our comprehension of matter and energy but also underpins the development of groundbreaking technologies, from semiconductors to quantum computers. With its counterintuitive yet experimentally confirmed theories, quantum mechanics opens up a plethora of questions about the fabric of the universe, making it a cornerstone of modern physics.

See also: quantum foundations, coherence, integrated information theory, fermi paradox

EP76 Max Borders on the Social Singularity 184

Currents 016: Robin Hanson on Are We Living In A Simulation? 179

EP74 Daniel Christian Wahl on Regeneration Dynamics 165

EP135 Dennis Waters on Behavior & Culture in One Dimension 121

EP50 Joe Brewer on Earth Regeneration 76

EP47 Mark Burgess on the Physics of Money 60

EP21 Roman Yampolskiy on the Outer Limits of AI 46

EP28 Mark Burgess on Promise Theory, AI & Spacetime 45