I’d like to thank Ferne Welch and Arthur Tansky for copy-editing the previous version of “Quantum Time“. It bears a significantly greater resemblance to English now!
And I would like to thank Jonathan Smith and also Mark West and Ashleigh Thomas for help in getting setup at University of Pennsylvania.
If anyone knows a bibtex style that handles electronic references well, please let me know. If no suggestions, then I think I will warm up learning Old Kingdom hieroglyphs, then tackle bibtex.
All comments on Quantum Time are very welcome. I’m planning to fold such into the great work of time as appropriate, then, if not too discouraged, push Quantum Time to the archive.
Thanks!
John Ashmead
Back in the early 70s there was a chimpanzee, Pablo the Chimp, who won 2nd prize in a California art show, under a pseudonym. When this came to light Pablo’s trainer was asked how the chimpanzee was, as an artist. The reporters ganged around, raised a skeptical eyebrow or three, and asked “Just how good is Pablo, qua artiste?”
This was before the Internet, back when if you wanted to send a message to a nearby island you had to get out your hammer and chisel, so I wasn’t able to find an exact record of the trainer’s response. But as I remember it, his response was along the lines of:
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In relativity time and space are treated symmetrically but in quantum mechanics the treatment of time is very different: in quantum mechanics time enters as a parameter, not an observable.
In my dissertation, I bridge this gap from the quantum mechanics side by quantizing time using the same rules as for space and then seeing what happens.
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I’ve set this blog up to explore the intersection between time and quantum mechanics. Both subjects are interesting in their own right, the intersection rich with possibility. No shortage of topics!
Cheers!
John Ashmead