Realm of Quantum Mechanics

Constructor Theory: Physics of Can and Can’t

26 min · 24. Mai 2026
Episode Constructor Theory: Physics of Can and Can’t Cover

Beschreibung

What if the fundamental laws of the universe aren't about what does happen, but what can and cannot happen? In this episode, we explore Constructor Theory, a provocative new framework in physics developed by David Deutsch and Chiara Marletto. Traditional physics relies on starting conditions and dynamical laws to predict the future, but Constructor Theory flips the script. We dive into the world of "counterfactuals"—the powerful physical principles that define why some transformations are possible and others are forbidden. From the "universal constructor" that could revolutionize how we build technology to the quest for a new "theory of everything" that unifies information, life, and thermodynamics, join us as we explore a mode of explanation that challenges our deepest understanding of reality.

Kommentare

0

Sei die erste Person, die kommentiert

Melde dich jetzt an und werde Teil der Realm of Quantum Mechanics-Community!

Loslegen

2 Monate für 1 €

Dann 4,99 € / Monat · Jederzeit kündbar.

  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo
  • 20 Stunden Hörbücher / Monat
  • Alle kostenlosen Podcasts

Alle Folgen

29 Folgen

Episode Mystery of the Quantum Eraser Cover

Mystery of the Quantum Eraser

In this episode, we dive into one of the most mind-bending and philosophically challenging experiments in modern science: the Delayed-Choice Quantum Eraser. We begin with a thought experiment proposed by physicist Maria Violaris in 2025, imagining a magazine whose text remains a blurry mix of overlapping possibilities until you focus on a paragraph, forcing the letters to settle into a single, definitive story. We trace this paradox back to its roots: Thomas Young’s famous 1801 double-slit experiment, which proved light behaves like a wave, and the subsequent quantum realizations that tracking a particle's path destroys its wave-like behavior, collapsing it into a simple particle clump. But what if you could cheat the system? We look at how legendary physicist John Wheeler pushed this boundary by asking what happens if we delay the choice to observe a particle until after it has already passed through the slits. Finally, we break down Kim’s famous 1999 hardware setup, an optical maze of barium borate crystals, beam splitters, and a coincidence counter, to explore the ultimate quantum twist: how erasing the "memory" of a photon's path, long after it has finished its journey, miraculously forces its past reality to rewrite itself.

Gestern22 min
Episode The Rise of Conspiracy Science Cover

The Rise of Conspiracy Science

In this episode, we expose the explosive rise of "conspiracy physics," a fast-growing online movement that weaponizes institutional mistrust to claim that mainstream science is fundamentally broken. We look past the familiar public health panics of the pandemic to see how quantum mechanics, general relativity, and string theory are being recast as cult-like belief systems enforced by a corrupt academic elite. We trace how real-world academic scandals, like the massive 900% spike in journal paper retractions, are being hijacked by online contrarians to argue that the entire physics community is pulling off a massive, coordinated cover-up. We dive into the viral, highly dramatic June 2025 YouTube showdown on Piers Morgan’s show, where mathematician Eric Weinstein’s self-published "Geometric Unity" theory was publicly dismantled by physicist Sean Carroll as a "dog-ate-my-homework" manuscript. We analyze the lucrative distribution network fueling this anti-elitist resentment—from Sabine Hossenfelder's performance-art-style takedowns before millions of subscribers to Joe Rogan's "just-asking-questions" podcast format. Finally, we confront the dangerous real-world fallout of this algorithm-driven radicalization, exploring how internet folklore has materialized into actual state bills criminalizing "chemtrails," viral weather warfare accusations during Hurricanes Helene and Milton, and an unprecedented wave of death threats targeting meteorologists and government scientists.

26. Juni 202616 min
Episode A Jewel Shape at the Heart of Quantum Physics Cover

A Jewel Shape at the Heart of Quantum Physics

In this episode, we dive into a radical frontier of theoretical physics that is completely rethinking the fabric of reality. Ever since Einstein introduced general relativity in 1915, space and time have been treated as the ultimate backdrop for every event in the cosmos. But when subatomic particles collide at high energies, calculating the probabilities of their messy transformations using standard methods becomes an absolute nightmare, often requiring hundreds of pages of grueling algebra for a single, basic collision. We explore how a brilliant group of theorists discovered a way to bypass this mathematical chaos entirely. By stepping outside our familiar coordinates, they uncovered a jewel-shaped, higher-dimensional geometric object called the amplituhedron. Amazingly, the entire volume of this geometric jewel perfectly encodes the particle probabilities that physicists have struggled to calculate for decades. It’s a mind-bending detective story tracking how a massive, nine-page equation famously collapsed into a simple, one-term function—proving that our timeless, spaceless universe might just be a shadow cast by pure geometry.

19. Juni 202615 min
Episode Constructor Theory: Physics of Can and Can’t Cover

Constructor Theory: Physics of Can and Can’t

What if the fundamental laws of the universe aren't about what does happen, but what can and cannot happen? In this episode, we explore Constructor Theory, a provocative new framework in physics developed by David Deutsch and Chiara Marletto. Traditional physics relies on starting conditions and dynamical laws to predict the future, but Constructor Theory flips the script. We dive into the world of "counterfactuals"—the powerful physical principles that define why some transformations are possible and others are forbidden. From the "universal constructor" that could revolutionize how we build technology to the quest for a new "theory of everything" that unifies information, life, and thermodynamics, join us as we explore a mode of explanation that challenges our deepest understanding of reality.

24. Mai 202626 min
Episode Quantum Astronomy - Hundred Km Wide Telescopes Cover

Quantum Astronomy - Hundred Km Wide Telescopes

In 2019, the world was captivated by the first image of a black hole—a feat achieved by turning the entire Earth into one giant radio telescope. But why haven't we done the same with optical light to see the surfaces of distant stars? This episode explores the "technical wall" that separates radio astronomy from optical observation. We dive into the massive logistics of "shipping starlight" via cargo planes and the physical limits of traditional interferometers. Discover why optical light is so "slippery," how the Earth's atmosphere scrambles incoming wavefronts, and why the next great leap in space observation won't come from bigger mirrors, but from the strange rules of quantum mechanics. Join us as we go on a forensic journey of the sky to solve the crisis of the optical telescope.

17. Mai 202631 min