Gratis verzending vanaf €35,-
Unieke producten
Milieuvriendelijk, hoogste kwaliteit
Professioneel advies: 085 - 743 03 12

Panel discussion: the role of the observer, the double-slit experiment, the reality of physical laws, etc.

Panel discussion: the role of the observer, the double-slit experiment, the reality of physical laws, etc.

Seeing | Quantum Physics | 2023-05-21

Training and research, concept. Pensive man and physical and mathematical formulas on the background

The Nobel Prize in physics in 2022 went to scientists who, for over 40 years, have carried out a series of experiments indicating that, contrary to materialist expectations, physical entities do not have standalone existence but are, in fact, products of observation. This result is extraordinarily relevant to our understanding of the nature of reality, and so Essentia Foundation, in collaboration with the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna, of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (home to Prof. Anton Zeilinger, one of 2022’s Nobel Laureates in physics), organized a conference discussing the implications of this result. The conference was hosted by IQOQI-Vienna’s Dr. Markus Müller and featured seven other speakers.

The video below is the record of the Q&A session at the end of the conference’s second and last day. The participants discuss whether there are objective physical laws out there in nature, whether the double-slit and similar experiments capture the essence of quantum mechanics, whether the scientific method demands inter-subjective confirmation, and what constitutes an observing agent under Quantum Bayesianism. This video completes our coverage of the 2022 conference. Stay tuned for news about the upcoming 2023 conference, which promises to be even more exciting!

Because of the way YouTube works, to watch the video embedded below you need to select our Platinum privacy option (see fingerprint icon to the lower-left). Otherwise, you can always watch the video directly on YouTube.

The double-slit experiment doesn’t reveal the essence of quantum weirdness

The double-slit experiment doesn’t reveal the essence of quantum weirdness

Seeing | Quantum Theory

Lorenzo Catani, PhD | 2023-05-07

Double-Slit Experiment - 3D Rendering

The Nobel Prize in physics in 2022 went to scientists who, for over 40 years, have carried out a series of experiments indicating that, contrary to materialist expectations, physical entities do not have standalone existence but are, in fact, products of observation. This result is extraordinarily relevant to our understanding of the nature of reality, and so Essentia Foundation, in collaboration with the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna, of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (home to Prof. Anton Zeilinger, one of 2022’s Nobel Laureates in physics), organized a conference discussing the implications of this result. The conference was hosted by IQOQI-Vienna’s Dr. Markus Müller and featured seven other speakers.

In this presentation, Dr. Lorenzo Catani argues that interference phenomena, such as observed in the famous double-slit experiment, in fact do not capture the essence of quantum theory.

because of the way YouTube works, to watch the video embedded below you must choose of Platinum privacy option (see fingerprint icon on the bottom-left). Otherwise, you can always watch the video directly on YouTube.

There are no physical laws in the world

There are no physical laws in the world

Seeing | Foundations of Physics

Daniele Oriti, PhD | 2023-04-16

Science and research of the universe, spiral galaxy and physical formulas, concept of knowledge and education. Elements of this image furnished by NASA.

The Nobel Prize in physics in 2022 went to scientists who, for over 40 years, have carried out a series of experiments indicating that, contrary to materialist expectations, physical entities do not have standalone existence but are, in fact, products of observation. This result is extraordinarily relevant to our understanding of the nature of reality, and so Essentia Foundation, in collaboration with the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna, of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (home to Prof. Anton Zeilinger, one of 2022’s Nobel Laureates in physics), organized a conference discussing the implications of this result. The conference was hosted by IQOQI-Vienna’s Dr. Markus Müller and featured seven other speakers.

In this, one of the most intriguing presentations of the conference, Dr. Daniele Oriti, from the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, defends the view that physical laws are epistemic in nature, having no independent ontological status.

This presentation was part of the ‘Physics of First-Person Perspective’ conference, organized at the end of 2022 by Essentia Foundation and the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna, of the Austrian Academy of Sciences.

Because of how YouTube works, to watch the video embedded below you must choose our ‘Platinum’ privacy option (see fingerprint on the bottom-left). Otherwise, you can always watch it directly on YouTube.

Does science need intersubjective confirmation?

Does science need intersubjective confirmation?

Seeing | Quantum Mechanics

Emily Adlam, PhD | 2023-04-09

Medical Development Laboratory: Team of Female and Male Scientist Using Microscope, Analyzes Petri Dish Sample. Specialists Working on Medicine, Biotechnology Research in Advanced Pharma Lab

The Nobel Prize in physics in 2022 went to scientists who, for over 40 years, have carried out a series of experiments indicating that, contrary to materialist expectations, physical entities do not have standalone existence but are, in fact, products of observation. This result is extraordinarily relevant to our understanding of the nature of reality, and so Essentia Foundation, in collaboration with the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna, of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (home to Prof. Anton Zeilinger, one of 2022’s Nobel Laureates in physics), organized a conference discussing the implications of this result. The conference was hosted by IQOQI-Vienna’s Dr. Markus Müller and featured seven other speakers.

In this presentation, Dr. Emily Adlam discusses the problem of confirmation in orthodox interpretations of quantum mechanics.

This presentation was part of the ‘Physics of First-Person Perspective’ conference, organized at the end of 2022 by Essentia Foundation and the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna, of the Austrian Academy of Sciences.

Because of how YouTube works, to watch the video embedded below you must choose our ‘Platinum’ privacy option (see fingerprint on the bottom-left). Otherwise, you can always watch it directly on YouTube.

Quantum Bayesianism and the embodied agent

Quantum Bayesianism and the embodied agent

Seeing | Quantum Physics

Jacques Pienaar, PhD | 2023-03-12

business person hand throw the dice, business gambling game concept

Dr. Jacques Pienaar discusses the notion of an embodied agent in the context of Quantum Bayesianism (‘QBism,’ for short). QBism is an interpretation of quantum mechanics according to which the wave function represents simply what we know about reality—a kind of betting strategy about what we will see next—as opposed to reality itself.

This presentation was part of the ‘Physics of First-Person Perspective’ conference, organized at the end of 2022 by Essentia Foundation and the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna, of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (home to Prof. Anton Zeilinger, one of 2022’s Nobel Laureates in physics).

Because of how YouTube works, to watch the video embedded below you must choose our ‘Platinum’ privacy option (see fingerprint on the bottom-left). Otherwise, you can always watch it directly on YouTube.

Panel discussion, the physics of first-person perspective (day 1)

Panel discussion, the physics of first-person perspective (day 1)

Debating | Quantum physics | 2023-02-26

shutterstock_1919352848

The Nobel Prize in physics in 2022 went to scientists who, for over 40 years, have carried out a series of experiments indicating that, contrary to materialist expectations, physical entities do not have standalone existence but are, in fact, products of observation. This result is extraordinarily relevant to our understanding of the nature of reality, and so Essentia Foundation, in collaboration with the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna, of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (home to Prof. Anton Zeilinger, one of 2022’s Nobel Laureates in physics), organized a conference discussing the implications of this result. The conference was hosted by IQOQI-Vienna’s Dr. Markus Müller and featured seven other speakers.

A panel discussion with Markus Müller, Caslav Brukner, Nuryia Nurgalieva and Eric Cavalcanti, closed the first day of ‘The Physics of First-Person Perspective‘ conference.

Thought experiments on a quantum computer

Thought experiments on a quantum computer

Seeing | Quantum Physics

quantum computer on the blue background 3d render

The Nobel Prize in physics in 2022 went to scientists who, for over 40 years, have carried out a series of experiments indicating that, contrary to materialist expectations, physical entities do not have standalone existence but are, in fact, products of observation. This result is extraordinarily relevant to our understanding of the nature of reality, and so Essentia Foundation, in collaboration with the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna, of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (home to Prof. Anton Zeilinger, one of 2022’s Nobel Laureates in physics), organized a conference discussing the implications of this result. The conference was hosted by IQOQI-Vienna’s Dr. Markus Müller and featured seven other speakers.

In this presentation, Nuriya Nurgalieva, M.Sc., discusses the ontological implications of thought experiments on a quantum computer.

Remember that, because of how YouTube works, to watch the video embedded below you must choose our ‘platinum’ privacy option (click on the fingerprint on the lower left to choose). Otherwise, you can always watch the video directly on YouTube.

What is it like to be Wigner’s friend?

What is it like to be Wigner’s friend?

Seeing | Quantum Physics

Laser,Beams,In,The,Laboratory,Of,Optical,Physics

The Nobel Prize in physics in 2022 went to scientists who, for over 40 years, have carried out a series of experiments indicating that, contrary to materialist expectations, physical entities do not have standalone existence but are, in fact, products of observation. This result is extraordinarily relevant to our understanding of the nature of reality, and so Essentia Foundation, in collaboration with the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna, of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (home to Prof. Anton Zeilinger, one of 2022’s Nobel Laureates in physics), organized a conference discussing the implications of this result. The conference was hosted by IQOQI-Vienna’s Dr. Markus Müller and featured seven other speakers.

In this fascinating presentation, Prof. Caslav Brukner, PhD, also from the IQOQI-Vienna, discusses what it may be like to be Wigner’s friend, the famous character of an important thought experiment in foundations of quantum entanglement.

Remember that, because of how YouTube works, to watch the video embedded below you must choose our ‘platinum’ privacy option (click on the fingerprint on the lower left to choose). Otherwise, you can always watch the video directly on YouTube.

Experimental metaphysics with first-person perspectives

Experimental metaphysics with first-person perspectives

Seeing | Quantum physics

Eric Cavalcanti, PhD | 2023-01-22

First person view to resting hiking legs,resting during hike. High rocks, clear sky and sun,

The Nobel Prize in physics in 2022 went to scientists who, for over 40 years, have carried out a series of experiments indicating that, contrary to materialist expectations, physical entities do not have standalone existence but are, in fact, products of observation. This result is extraordinarily relevant to our understanding of the nature of reality, and so Essentia Foundation, in collaboration with the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna, of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (home to Prof. Anton Zeilinger, one of 2022’s Nobel Laureates in physics), organized a conference discussing the implications of this result. The conference was hosted by IQOQI-Vienna’s Dr. Markus Müller and featured seven other speakers.

In this presentation, Dr. Eric Cavalcanti, from Griffith University Center for Quantum Dynamics, discusses experimental metaphysics with first-person perspectives.

Remember that, because of how YouTube works, to watch the video embedded below you must choose our ‘platinum’ privacy option (click on the fingerprint on the lower left to choose). Otherwise, you can always watch the video directly on YouTube.

An introduction to the physics of first-person perspective

An introduction to the physics of first-person perspective

Seeing | Foundations of physics

Markus Müller, PhD | 2023-01-15

Quantum,Entanglement,Concept,With,Particles,And,Energy,Flow,,Entangled,Particles

The Nobel Prize in physics in 2022 went to scientists who, for over 40 years, have carried out a series of experiments indicating that, contrary to materialist expectations, physical entities do not have standalone existence but are, in fact, products of observation. This result is extraordinarily relevant to our understanding of the nature of reality, and so Essentia Foundation, in collaboration with the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna, of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (home to Prof. Anton Zeilinger, one of 2022’s Nobel Laureates in physics), organized a conference discussing the implications of this result. The conference was hosted by IQOQI-Vienna’s Dr. Markus Müller and featured seven other speakers. In this first video, Dr. Müller introduces the theme of the conference and explains its relevance.

Remember that, because of how YouTube works, to watch the video embedded below you must choose our ‘platinum’ privacy option (click on the fingerprint on the lower left to choose). Otherwise, you can always watch the video directly on YouTube.