The Non-local Universe: The New Physics and Matters of the MindClassical physics states that physical reality is local--a point in space cannot influence another point beyond a relatively short distance. However, In 1997, experiments were conducted in which light particles (photons) originated under certain conditions and traveled in opposite directions to detectors located about seven miles apart. The amazing results indicated that the photons "interacted" or "communicated" with one another instantly or "in no time." Since a distance of seven miles is quite vast in quantum physics, this led physicists to an extraordinary conclusion--even if experiments could somehow be conducted in which the distance between the detectors was half-way across the known universe, the results would indicate that interaction or communication between the photons would be instantaneous. What was revealed in these little-known experiments in 1997 is that physical reality is non-local--a discovery that Robert Nadeau and Menas Kafatos view as "the most momentous in the history of science." In The Non-Local Universe, Nadeau and Kafatos offer a revolutionary look at the breathtaking implications of non-locality. They argue that since every particle in the universe has been "entangled" with other particles like the two photons in the 1997 experiments, physical reality on the most basic level is an undivided wholeness. In addition to demonstrating that physical processes are vastly interdependent and interactive, they also show that more complex systems in both physics and biology display emergent properties and/or behaviors that cannot be explained in the terms of the sum of parts. One of the most startling implications of non-locality in human terms, claim the authors, is that there is no longer any basis for believing in the stark division between mind and world that has preoccupied much of western thought since the seventeenth century. And they also make a convincing case that human consciousness can now be viewed as emergent from and seamlessly connected with the entire cosmos. In pursuing this groundbreaking argument, the authors not only provide a fascinating history of developments that led to the discovery of non-locality and the sometimes heated debate between the great scientists responsible for these discoveries. They also argue that advances in scientific knowledge have further eroded the boundaries between physics and biology, and that recent studies on the evolution of the human brain suggest that the logical foundations of mathematics and ordinary language are much more similar than we previously imagined. What this new knowledge reveals, the authors conclude, is that the connection between mind and nature is far more intimate than we previously dared to imagine. What they offer is a revolutionary look at the implications of non-locality, implications that reach deep into that most intimate aspect of humanity--consciousness. |
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User Review - fpagan - LibraryThingPhilosopher and physicist try to explain the implications of the long-distance entanglements exhibited in quantum physics and the Bohrian concept of complementarity. ("Contraria non contradictoria sed ... Read full review
Contents
Quantum Nonlocality An Amazing New Fact of Nature | 1 |
Leaving the Realm of the Visualizable Waves Quanta and the Rise of Quantum Theory | 17 |
Quantum Connections WaveParticle Dualism | 41 |
Over Any Distance in No Time Bells Theorem and the Aspect and Gisin Experiments | 65 |
Ways of Knowing A New Epistemalogy of Science | 83 |
The Logic of Nature Complementarity and the New Biology | 105 |
The Evolution of Mind The SymbolMaking Animal | 125 |
Other editions - View all
The Non-Local Universe: The New Physics and Matters of the Mind Robert Nadeau,Menas Kafatos Limited preview - 2001 |
The Non-Local Universe: The New Physics and Matters of the Mind Robert Nadeau,Menas Kafatos Limited preview - 2001 |
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