Nice proof. Fun stuff. So the reason we perceive time is because of limitation of space in the universe. Limited time arrows, limited entropy. Kinda cool sounding, Time as structure. I had an intelligence idea like that I sill kick around in my program I'm working on. Sounds like a brane...
Hi, all and Chris Hillman,
I am reading your post and also am on decoherence in the book I'm reading so far. Thus will lead to superstring theory at the end. I will post more later.
Mike2:
As far as black holes, they could probably show that there are many different levels of entropy...
It would seem to me that the universe is made up of certain Low Entropies here and there that could potentially turn into allot more Low Entropy like Humans for instance becoming more intelligent and organizing the universe. Right now we view the universe as mainly high Entropy and moving toward...
Sorry, got a little carried away with this book I am reading, just tacked on a few to many extra thoughts there.
Basically I was asking about observing very accurate atomic clocks and a possible relationship with particle waves. The clocks seem closely based on the speed of photons(?).
In the...
Would QM fail in the fast moving satellite or Int. Space Station if I conducted the double slit experiment in the space station, which is traveling allot faster then most jets. This would be like the clocks experiment where both times were different; the one on the plane being allot slower then...
I got that wrong. I have read that the brain can operate at a sub-atomic level at the Axon, but not Quantum (Quark, Lepton etc.).
Where do our thoughts come from? Maybe a Quantum computer can better help identify that.
I agree the artificial computer is probably always faster.
This topic is...
More of an outside question but does the Earth's quantum field have anything to do with gravity as a vacuum effect?
A large mass object could create a warp in space this way but I was wondering what the relationship was with EM fields in studies?
Quantum computers, because the protein folding is at a photon level, right? As well as the synapse connections in the brain which are subatomic. Would an animal brain be like this as well?
The brain is as fast as you can go I think, so an artificial brain couldn't go any faster and it might...