Excerpt from ‘Modern Re-appropriation of the Turing Test: The Potential for Proof Implied by Advancements in the Science of Computer Vision and Recent Observations of Quantum Properties’

“The quantum uncertainty principle is the idea that it’s impossible to know certain pairs of things about a quantum particle at once. For example, the more precisely you know the position of an atom, the less precisely you can know the speed with which it’s moving. It’s a limit on the fundamental knowability of nature, not a statement on measurement skill. The new work shows that how much you can learn about the wave versus the particle behaviour of a system is constrained in exactly the same way.” (Quantum physics just got less complicated- phys.org. December 19, 2014). Consider the … Continue reading Excerpt from ‘Modern Re-appropriation of the Turing Test: The Potential for Proof Implied by Advancements in the Science of Computer Vision and Recent Observations of Quantum Properties’