It’s written by the ā€œfather of quantumā€ and his most interesting and ridiculous explanation is: if the computing isn’t happening in our universe, then it must be happening in other universes. Parallel processing at the multiverse scale!

His question was: where else would the computing happen if we can’t observe it here???

That blew my mind.

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

Interesting! No, I haven’t read that. I know there’s quite a few books that attempt to capture quantum theory that looks interesting… I’ll add it to my ever growing list of books

:) I came to quantum from a weird angle (hardware constraints/obsession) so some of the more theoretical stuff is definitely missing in my background

Yes it’s highly philosophical. I still don’t understand half the things, but I have to say it was by far the best explanation of quantum I’ve encountered. Definitely worth the time.

I appreciate the recommendation, book recs are on of my favorite things in life :) šŸ«‚ I v much enjoy the philosophical

Don’t get me wrong, it’s not a philosophy book, David Deutsch is a full blown physicist. Don’t want you to be expecting some soft science book šŸ˜„

Haha I love the term soft science! Never heard that before but definitely using it moving forward ā˜ŗļø

They're using a side universe? Like BitVM? šŸ˜„