Message from @JFGariepy

Discord ID: 681211428778016854


2020-02-23 18:47:12 UTC  

its straight

2020-02-23 18:47:36 UTC  

The thing is, time is really interesting. its literally true that the present is defined as a boundary condition between past and future. we think only the past is fixed, but its not true, the future is fixed as well

2020-02-23 18:47:51 UTC  

In the future a kid will be able to order a Dyson sphere for a science project

2020-02-23 18:48:27 UTC  

This is what im talking about, not some pseudo-science crackpot shit

2020-02-23 18:48:40 UTC  

The two-state vector formalism is one example of a time-symmetric interpretation of quantum mechanics (see Interpretations of quantum mechanics). Time-symmetric interpretations of quantum mechanics were first suggested by Walter Schottky in 1921,[1] and later by several other scientists. The two-state vector formalism was first developed by Satosi Watanabe[2] in 1955, who named it the Double Inferential state-Vector Formalism (DIVF). Watanabe proposed that information given by forwards evolving quantum states is not complete; rather, both forwards and backwards evolving quantum states are required to describe a quantum state: a first state vector that evolves from the initial conditions towards the future, and a second state vector that evolves backwards in time from future boundary conditions. Past and future measurements, taken together, provide complete information about a quantum system. Watanabe's work was later rediscovered by Yakir Aharonov, Peter Bergmann and Joel Lebowitz in 1964, who later renamed it the Two-State Vector Formalism (TSVF).[3] Conventional prediction, as well as retrodiction, can be obtained formally by separating out the initial conditions (or, conversely, the final conditions) by performing sequences of coherence-destroying operations, thereby cancelling out the influence of the two state vectors.

2020-02-23 18:49:04 UTC  

*Watanabe proposed that information given by forwards evolving quantum states is not complete; rather, both forwards and backwards evolving quantum states are required to describe a quantum state: a first state vector that evolves from the initial conditions towards the future, and a second state vector that evolves backwards in time from future boundary conditions. Past and future measurements, taken together, provide complete information about a quantum system.*

2020-02-23 18:49:10 UTC  

What’s the most energy producing fictional object

2020-02-23 18:49:15 UTC  

It must be a Dyson sphere

2020-02-23 18:49:16 UTC  

gob

2020-02-23 18:49:20 UTC  

<:mlady:389497741769703424>

2020-02-23 18:49:22 UTC  

depends

2020-02-23 18:49:26 UTC  

Nice, I didn't know how quantum physics was handling time

2020-02-23 18:49:31 UTC  

the most energy producing object is an evaporating black hole

2020-02-23 18:49:42 UTC  

Yeah its absolutely the most fascinating part of quantum physics

2020-02-23 18:49:52 UTC  

Harvesting energy off a black hole is ring world shit

2020-02-23 18:49:56 UTC  

our inability to truly understand time is why we cant close the gap and get a quantum theory of gravity

2020-02-23 18:50:15 UTC  

The last sentient organisms in the universe before heat death will be surviving off of black holes

2020-02-23 18:50:50 UTC  

Which is depressing as fuck to think about

2020-02-23 18:51:00 UTC  

Why

2020-02-23 18:51:04 UTC  

I’ll be in heaven with Ronald Reagan and Jesus

2020-02-23 18:51:06 UTC  

>mfw Fuguer is teaching JF

2020-02-23 18:51:10 UTC  

Why would that be a problem

2020-02-23 18:51:23 UTC  

JF teaches us all so many things

2020-02-23 18:51:26 UTC  

Imagine being one of the last humans ever next to a black hole

2020-02-23 18:51:29 UTC  

Why live

2020-02-23 18:52:07 UTC  

Actually there's theoretically a way you can make your civilization last forever even with limited energy

2020-02-23 18:52:23 UTC  

Though it's kind of a cheat related to Zeno's paradox

2020-02-23 18:52:25 UTC  

Freeze it in stasis

2020-02-23 18:52:33 UTC  

So entropy can’t occur

2020-02-23 18:52:54 UTC  

yeah im trying to rememeber the guys name who proposed it

2020-02-23 18:53:02 UTC  

I got it right

2020-02-23 18:53:15 UTC  

basically you have your civ sleep and the time it sleeps doubles each time

2020-02-23 18:53:25 UTC  

You’ve gotta go infinitely slowly to infinitely slowly leak your limited energy

2020-02-23 18:53:26 UTC  

so it technically never runs out of energy

2020-02-23 18:53:52 UTC  

But also you’re awake for shorter and shorter intervals

2020-02-23 18:54:01 UTC  

having some matlab fun this afternoon

2020-02-23 18:54:10 UTC  

Nice what are you doing on there

2020-02-23 18:54:26 UTC  

Download the deep learning toolkit my friend in college wrote part of it

2020-02-23 18:54:30 UTC  

Matlab is fun