Monday 15 March 2010

What we "know" about the world can change

Quantum physics gives us bizarre paradoxes which challenge the most basic facts we know about the world. We can argue against them and pretend it’s not true, or we can change the way we look at the world – and see that actually, we’re connected.

Quantum physics gives us some bizarre paradoxes. It tells us things which contradict everything we “know” about the world. Think of the last time you sat on an airplane – on the screen they have a picture of where the plane is and how fast it’s going. The pilot has to know that, or the plane won’t arrive!

But what if you have an electron, instead of an airplane? Then we meet Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle. This says you can know an electron’s speed or its position, but not both. The more accurately you measure its speed, the less you know its position. The more accurately you measure its position, the less you know its speed. So if you can’t say where it is and how fast it’s going, how do you work anything out? Heisenberg used a probability distribution – an equation saying all the places it might be and all the speeds it might be traveling at. He even said that the electron actually was in all those places, at all those speeds. It only chooses its path when we measure it. Bizarrely, this works just fine. Even more bizarrely, the electronics in that airplane are using quantum physics!

For our picture of the world, this is mad. Nothing can be in two places at once, never mind lots of places. Everyone finds quantum physics bizarre, including quantum physicists. And so they come up with different explanations and interpretations, trying to figure out what this tells us about how the world really is.

The most standard explanation is the Copenhagen interpretation – but even within that, there are differences. These break down like this:

  • atheism: of course the electron isn’t in all those places! That’s ridiculous. It’s just a mathematical model. “What cannot be observed doesn’t exist.” (This was Bohr’s stance. It’s called “positivist” or “subjective”, and is similar to the Ensemble interpretation.)
  • agnostic: we have no idea whether the electron’s in all those places or in one place. But who cares? The math works just fine. (This was Von Weizsäcker’s view.)
  • believer: it’s all real. The electron really is all those places, and/or none. Its path comes into existence when we observe it. (This is “realism”, and it’s Heisenberg’s approach.)

(And if you think that’s weird – another widely-accepted interpretation is the many-worlds theory: each possibility gets its own world to happen in.)

Quantum physics contradicts what we “know” about the universe. The atheist view, positivism, says that everything we knew before is right, an electron can’t be in more than one place, and that’s that – no matter what the math says! The agnostic view just shrugs. This blog goes with realism, the “believers”: the math works, and it’s true. The electron changes when we observe it. It’s all real. The observer is influencing reality – if not actually creating it.

What we “know” about the universe can be wrong – and we can learn, and we can change. We don’t have to cling onto what we used to “know” was true. We can learn new truths. We can create new paths.

But surely this only applies to particles? Quantum physics is for very tiny, very fast things, and Newtonian physics is for normal things, like cars and people and rolling balls and airplanes. Right? Not quite. Scale up the calculations, try making a mega-equation for every electron in the airplane. If the math doesn’t kill you, you’ll discover this: it predicts the same thing as Newton’s laws. Newton’s laws are just quantum-physics-for-big-stuff. In fact, most classical physics is now seen as a special case of quantum physics. (There is gravity, though – gravity affects large objects, like us, and not tiny particles. Physicists would sell their souls en masse for a theory which combines gravity & quantum physics.)

Our assumptions about the world have to change. People try to say, “The world doesn’t work like that!” and find they’re arguing with hard math which says, “Oh, yes, it does.” We assume we’re separate. How can we affect an electron just by observing it? But we’re not – we are connected. Literally, physically. Our assumptions often rest on science, and science often rests on our assumptions, but sometimes newness enters the world. This gives us a new way of looking at the world: connection. This is the new age of enlightenment.

Instead of assuming we’re all separate, we assume we’re connected. We’re not isolated individuals, each trapped in our own lonely box of skin – we’re connected, with light and love humming a web between us. Between each other, between us and the world. We’re a part of it.

Instead of assuming we only have an effect when we choose to, we assume we’re having an effect all the time. Our happiness leaps from person to person, like a smile from a stranger on the way to work. Our sorrow reaches out into the world, asking for help. The more we know this, the more we live it, the more it’s true.

Monday 1 March 2010

A new age of enlightenment

Welcome to Science and Spirituality – a new blog to open up conversation and about our nature as human beings and how we’re changing. We want to be part of a paradigm shift – a shift that is already happening, towards compassion and connection: towards a new age of enlightenment.

We believe humans have the capacity for change, and that we stand on the brink of a fundamental change – in how we understand the world, live our lives, and relate to each other. We are a changing race. The evolution of our bodies allowed our brains to grow, and allowed us to carve out a new niche for ourselves – to use tools, to develop speech. Our consciousness awakened. Our brains are the key to our survival – the things we’ve invented, the things we’ve built. But our brains are also our downfall – the things we’ve destroyed, the people we injure. It’s time to take the next leap forward in evolution: from body, to mind, and now to spirit. We know how much a change in our thinking can change our world. We’ve seen it before – in the Enlightenment, in the 18th Century.

The 18th century Enlightenment was the Age of Reason – it said arguments should be based on reason and logic. It said everyone was equal and everything could be analyzed and criticized – nothing was too sacred. This was a massive change in how people thought about knowledge and the world around them, including their traditions, morality, and institutions like the government and the church. So many of the values we cherish sprang from this: the importance of freedom and democracy, religious tolerance, the scientific method, the belief – above all – in being rational. Immanuel Kant’s motto for the Enlightenment was “Sapere aude!” – Dare to know! That Enlightenment brought the freedom to use one’s own intelligence. Today’s Enlightenment is the freedom to experience one’s own spirit.

The new Enlightenment’s motto is, “We are connected.” In terms of physics, we’re connected to matter, our observations changing what happens in an experiment. In our lives and souls, we’re connected to a universe far beyond ourselves. In society, we’re connected to each other. The wellbeing of every individual is wrapped up in the wellbeing of their society and the wider world. What benefits one person in a group can’t help but benefit the rest of the group. Good generates good – and sometimes in the most unexpected ways. For example, increasing a woman’s literacy raises her child’s life expectancy – regardless of her income, her social class, or where she lives. Globally, it’s increasingly obvious that we are connected at every level: economically, environmentally, politically, socially. No country can stand alone; no person can untangle their fate from the world’s. So let’s use that – instead of trying to live despite the world, let’s embrace it. Embrace it: accept it, but also hug it close, because it is a power for good stronger than we realize.

Let’s build on these connections – intellectually, but also spiritually. Intellectually, let’s help develop our emerging, new way of thinking: the understanding that we’re all connected. Just like the first Enlightenment showed, a massive shift of assumptions is possible: changing the way we think can change the world. But for the new Age of Enlightenment, our hearts need to be signed up too. Love: light: connection: optimism: however we phrase it, this is a change we need to feel. The world may seem to be teetering on the edge of darkness, with recession, and wars, and climate change – but all around us we can also see green shoots sprouting, new promise. People’s unstinting generosity to each other, when it’s needed most. A concern and horror for war that we’ve never seen before in human history. An energy for change and a willingness to sacrifice our own pleasures for the good of the planet. We hope you’ll join us – thrashing out ideas on the blog, spreading the word, and changing the paradigm to…

  • compassion
  • love
  • connection