Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Quantum this and that...

Quantum Physics sounds so sciency. Jason Angle steps into Quantum wierdness and drives through it's barriers in my upcoming novel, Entangled. But it's not hard to understand from one point of view.

Did you know Quantum Physics has been around for over a hundred years? Only now are real applications being developed out of this strange science. Quantum communication, computing, and memory are in heavy research right now. The promises are many, but we've seen that before in science.

Yet all new theoretical discoveries take a lot of time to come to fruition. Even Einstein's theories took 40 years until atomic energy could be exploited, and that was accelerated by war's needs. Newton's laws weren't applied within his century, much anyway, but prevail for most work today. Why does this happen?

This pattern is well known. At first there's only one scientist who understands the theory well. He can only think 24 hours a day and that limits the adoption of the idea. In a few years other scientists may get time to work on the new theory in detail. Then a few years more and more scientists come on board, maybe a few entrepreneurs too who can imagine how to use the science for practical purposes. Years and years later, after exchange of ideas, trials, and errors, a local singularity, or tipping point if you wish, explodes and it becomes obvious in hind-sight how to use the theory.

This parallels other processes, like in market life cycles: first, introduction; next, adoption and growth; then maturity; finally saturation and decline. However, theory life cycles are a step back, a meta-market in a sense, that take a much longer time than gadgets for instance: 8 track, cassette, CDs, DVDs. Oh, you didn't know CD's and DVDs were declining? Think iTunes.

Then take the creation of the universe theory. Early theories had Sun worship (paganism I'll call it though the definition is not correct?), multiple gods (polytheism), then a single God (monotheism), creating everything; the earth was the center of all, and flat. But then the telescope spured new theories of a solar system, then a galaxy, then a universe. Paganism gave way to polytheism then to monotheism. Paganism and polytheism still have followers, but they've declined heavily over the centuries. Monotheism is still very strong but I see reports of decline in the church in the last few years, though that might mean decline of church only, not monotheism. Evolution has only been around two centuries and might on the surface be meta-paganism of sorts (nature). Maybe monotheism will be the longest theory of them all, who knows? This creation jury is still sitting, whether devine or happenstance, and we reading this today will all be dead and dust before it's settled.

That's something to think about. And no, if you think you can guess my beliefs from the above paragraph, you are wrong. Beliefs are different than an objective, scientific view of something. Think about that!

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