Nex
Forum Turnip
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2004
- Messages
- 1,655
Apologies if this has been posted before, I ran a search and did not turn anything up, but I admit I'm tired and subsequently lazy. 
This sounds like utter and complete bunk, but there was an article on Nature.com called "Natural selection acts on the quantum world" written by physicist Philip Ball.
http://www.nature.com/news/2004/041220/pf/041220-12_pf.html
Click the link for the rest.
Now, I may be grossly misunderstanding this article, and if I am please tell me, but doesn't it (at least initially) sound like newage-sewage?
This sounds like utter and complete bunk, but there was an article on Nature.com called "Natural selection acts on the quantum world" written by physicist Philip Ball.
http://www.nature.com/news/2004/041220/pf/041220-12_pf.html
Excerpted from the article:
A team of physicists has proved a theorem that explains how our objective, common reality emerges from the subtle and sensitive quantum world.
If, as quantum mechanics says, observing the world tends to change it, how is it that we can agree on anything at all? Why doesn't each person leave a slightly different version of the world for the next person to find?
Because, say the researchers, certain special states of a system are promoted above others by a quantum form of natural selection, which they call quantum darwinism. Information about these states proliferates and gets imprinted on the environment. So observers coming along and looking at the environment in order to get a picture of the world tend to see the same 'preferred' states. [...]
Click the link for the rest.
Now, I may be grossly misunderstanding this article, and if I am please tell me, but doesn't it (at least initially) sound like newage-sewage?