More unsettling is , which Einstein called "spooky action at a distance." When two particles become entangled, a change to one instantly affects the other, regardless of the miles or light-years between them. This suggests a deep, underlying non-locality —a hidden layer of reality where everything is interconnected, transcending our traditional concepts of space and time. Cosmology and the Bounds of the Infinite
At the subatomic level, the "stuff" of the world refuses to behave like things. Quantum mechanics reveals that particles do not exist in definite states until they are measured. This is the principle of , famously illustrated by Schrödinger’s Cat.
While quantum theory peers into the microscopic, cosmology looks at the "Ultimate Reality" on a universal scale. The discovery of and Dark Energy has humbled us; we now know that everything we can see—stars, planets, and people—accounts for only about 5% of the universe.
We are moving away from a reality of "things" and toward a reality of "relationships." Ultimate reality may not be a substance we can grasp, but a code we are just beginning to decrypt.
Perhaps the deepest shift is the role of the . Physicist John Wheeler proposed the "Participatory Universe," suggesting that consciousness isn't just a byproduct of matter, but a fundamental component that "brings the universe into being" through the act of observation.
More unsettling is , which Einstein called "spooky action at a distance." When two particles become entangled, a change to one instantly affects the other, regardless of the miles or light-years between them. This suggests a deep, underlying non-locality —a hidden layer of reality where everything is interconnected, transcending our traditional concepts of space and time. Cosmology and the Bounds of the Infinite
At the subatomic level, the "stuff" of the world refuses to behave like things. Quantum mechanics reveals that particles do not exist in definite states until they are measured. This is the principle of , famously illustrated by Schrödinger’s Cat. Science and Ultimate Reality: Quantum Theory, C...
While quantum theory peers into the microscopic, cosmology looks at the "Ultimate Reality" on a universal scale. The discovery of and Dark Energy has humbled us; we now know that everything we can see—stars, planets, and people—accounts for only about 5% of the universe. More unsettling is , which Einstein called "spooky
We are moving away from a reality of "things" and toward a reality of "relationships." Ultimate reality may not be a substance we can grasp, but a code we are just beginning to decrypt. Quantum mechanics reveals that particles do not exist
Perhaps the deepest shift is the role of the . Physicist John Wheeler proposed the "Participatory Universe," suggesting that consciousness isn't just a byproduct of matter, but a fundamental component that "brings the universe into being" through the act of observation.