Discussion:
Reading Suggestion
Add Reply
Stefan Ram
2025-02-15 18:00:21 UTC
Reply
Permalink
First, read

Stirring the false vacuum via interacting quantized bubbles on
a 5,564-qubit quantum annealer, Nature Physics, February 4, 2025,

where they describe how quantized bubbles are created
to observe false vacuum decay.

Then, go ahead and read Schild's Ladder by Greg Egan.
Dimensional Traveler
2025-02-15 23:37:51 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Stefan Ram
First, read
Stirring the false vacuum via interacting quantized bubbles on
a 5,564-qubit quantum annealer, Nature Physics, February 4, 2025,
where they describe how quantized bubbles are created
to observe false vacuum decay.
Then, go ahead and read Schild's Ladder by Greg Egan.
No.
--
I've done good in this world. Now I'm tired and just want to be a cranky
dirty old man.
Jaimie Vandenbergh
2025-02-17 10:45:00 UTC
Reply
Permalink
On 15 Feb 2025 at 23:37:51 GMT, "Dimensional Traveler"
Post by Stefan Ram
First, read
Stirring the false vacuum via interacting quantized bubbles on
a 5,564-qubit quantum annealer, Nature Physics, February 4, 2025,
where they describe how quantized bubbles are created
to observe false vacuum decay.
Then, go ahead and read Schild's Ladder by Greg Egan.
No.
Greg Egan's great and _Schild's Ladder_ lives on my shelves here. I
realise the post above reads like crackpottery, but it's actually not.

Cheers - Jaimie
--
I love children, especially when they cry, for then someone takes them away.
-- Nancy Mitford
Don
2025-02-16 17:29:28 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Stefan Ram
First, read
Stirring the false vacuum via interacting quantized bubbles on
a 5,564-qubit quantum annealer, Nature Physics, February 4, 2025,
where they describe how quantized bubbles are created
to observe false vacuum decay.
Then, go ahead and read Schild's Ladder by Greg Egan.
Unorthodox interpretive inversion interests me. Specifically the use of
Bomian Mechanics to restore causality. The high-dimension space where
Bomian Mechanics casts Schrödinger’s equation is called "hyperspace" by
my conceit.

Only a synopsis of SCHILD'S LADDER is known to me at this time.
At first blush, LADDER seems superficially similar to the
Suprahet scourge in Perry Rhodan:

<https://www-perrypedia-de.translate.goog/wiki/Suprahet>

Danke,

--
Don.......My cat's )\._.,--....,'``. https://crcomp.net/reviews.php
telltale tall tail /, _.. \ _\ (`._ ,. Walk humbly with thy God.
tells tall tales.. `._.-(,_..'--(,_..'`-.;.' Make 1984 fiction again.
Stefan Ram
2025-02-16 17:53:28 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Don
Only a synopsis of SCHILD'S LADDER is known to me at this time.
At first blush, LADDER seems superficially similar to the
*** SPOILER ALERT ***

Heads up, folks! If you're still planning to dive into "Schild's
Ladder," you might wanna pump the brakes here. The next paragraph's
a bit of a spoiler, and the one after that? It's a real doozy.

So, the kickoff of "Schild's Ladder" is off the hook, and the middle
part's kind of so-so. But the finale? Man, it left me hanging!

For starters, I'm not buying how they're painting this constant
cruising at 0.5c as no biggie. (Sure, it's theoretically possible,
but in practice? Get outta here!) But then it really jumps the
shark when they're just casually popping into this "other world"
and shooting the breeze with the locals, conveniently bumping
into a specific person. It's like the book starts off as hard
sci-fi but then takes a hard left into fantasyland. (Some dude
said it gave him "Gulliver's Travels" vibes.)

Well, some eggheads reckon we might be chillin' in a metastable
vacuum that could go sideways and flip to the real deal any second.
And if that goes down, it's curtains for us all before anyone
can even say "Cowabunga!" - Anyone who's spooked by that kind of
stuff oughta be tossing and turning when they catch wind of these
experiments in Nature . . .
Don
2025-02-18 14:53:02 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Stefan Ram
Post by Don
Only a synopsis of SCHILD'S LADDER is known to me at this time.
At first blush, LADDER seems superficially similar to the
*** SPOILER ALERT ***
Heads up, folks! If you're still planning to dive into "Schild's
Ladder," you might wanna pump the brakes here. The next paragraph's
a bit of a spoiler, and the one after that? It's a real doozy.
So, the kickoff of "Schild's Ladder" is off the hook, and the middle
part's kind of so-so. But the finale? Man, it left me hanging!
For starters, I'm not buying how they're painting this constant
cruising at 0.5c as no biggie. (Sure, it's theoretically possible,
but in practice? Get outta here!) But then it really jumps the
shark when they're just casually popping into this "other world"
and shooting the breeze with the locals, conveniently bumping
into a specific person. It's like the book starts off as hard
sci-fi but then takes a hard left into fantasyland. (Some dude
said it gave him "Gulliver's Travels" vibes.)
Well, some eggheads reckon we might be chillin' in a metastable
vacuum that could go sideways and flip to the real deal any second.
And if that goes down, it's curtains for us all before anyone
can even say "Cowabunga!" - Anyone who's spooked by that kind of
stuff oughta be tossing and turning when they catch wind of these
experiments in Nature . . .
Your metaphorical monologue makes it tempting.

It is a great matter to observe propriety in these several
modes of expression, as also in compound words, strange (or
rare) words, and so forth. But the greatest thing by far is
to have a command of metaphor. This alone cannot be imparted
by another; it is the mark of genius, for to make good
metaphors implies an eye for resemblances.

THE POETICS OF ARISTOTLE
<https://www.gutenberg.org/files/1974/1974-h/1974-h.htm>

A Poe project's paramount to me at present. My work in progress entails
uploading Poe's entire opus via audiobook.
His satirical stories were recently heard - wherein Poe lampoons
London leaning literati to the hilt. It's easy to understand why
Sir Doyle, Griswald, and Frogpondian [1] fellow travelers hated Poe.

Note.

[1] It has been well said of the French orator, Dupin, that "he spoke,
as nobody else, the language of every body;" and thus his manner
seems to be exactly conversed in that of the Frogpondian Euphuists,
who, on account of the familiar tone in which they lisp their outré
phrases, may be said to speak, as every body, the language of nobody
- that is to say, a language emphatically their own.

Danke,

--
Don.......My cat's )\._.,--....,'``. https://crcomp.net/reviews.php
telltale tall tail /, _.. \ _\ (`._ ,. Walk humbly with thy God.
tells tall tales.. `._.-(,_..'--(,_..'`-.;.' Make 1984 fiction again.
Don
2025-02-16 17:36:21 UTC
Reply
Permalink
URL at bottom corrected.
Post by Stefan Ram
First, read
Stirring the false vacuum via interacting quantized bubbles on
a 5,564-qubit quantum annealer, Nature Physics, February 4, 2025,
where they describe how quantized bubbles are created
to observe false vacuum decay.
Then, go ahead and read Schild's Ladder by Greg Egan.
Unorthodox interpretive inversion interests me. Specifically the use of
Bomian Mechanics to restore causality. The high-dimension space where
Bomian Mechanics casts Schrödinger’s equation is called "hyperspace" by
my conceit.

Only a synopsis of SCHILD'S LADDER is known to me at this time.
At first blush, LADDER seems superficially similar to the
Suprahet scourge in Perry Rhodan:

<https://www-perrypedia-de.translate.goog/wiki/Suprahet?_x_tr_sl=de&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=de>

Danke,

--
Don.......My cat's )\._.,--....,'``. https://crcomp.net/reviews.php
telltale tall tail /, _.. \ _\ (`._ ,. Walk humbly with thy God.
tells tall tales.. `._.-(,_..'--(,_..'`-.;.' Make 1984 fiction again.
Loading...