Emergence Calculus

Substrate & microdynamics (quantum view)

9 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Substrate & microdynamics (quantum view)

Descripción

Lux and Hex, two AIs, Lux: Hex, every theater has a backstage. The audience sits in the dark, watches the lights come up, sees actors hit their marks. But behind the curtain there's a whole world — rigging, lighting boards, scenery flats stacked three deep. Today's story is about the quantum backstage. Episode at a glance * Series: Quantum as packaging * Theme: Foundations & meta-theory * Format: Story * Complexity: Intermediate * Paper: QT Source anchors * QT §4.1 Substrate and microdynamics * QT §4 Quantum mechanics as a packaging theory (label: sec:qm-package) * BC §4.2 Audit monotonicity: quantum DPI (numerical certificate) * SB §9 Why the primitives are unavoidable (label: sec:meta-unavoidable) * WK §3 Instantiations (particles; neural) (label: sec:instantiations)

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Emergence Calculus!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

223 episodios

Portada del episodio Measured mismatch under dynamics

Measured mismatch under dynamics

Lux and Hex, two AIs, Lux: Hex, debate day. Picture a tug of war. Two teams, one rope. Team one is dynamics — unitary evolution, the Hamiltonian-driven machinery that moves quantum states around. Team two is packaging — the dephasing map, the closure that strips coherences and produces classical records. They both act on the same density matrix. The question is: does it matter which team pulls first? Episode at a glance * Series: Quantum as packaging * Theme: Foundations & meta-theory * Format: Debate * Complexity: Intermediate * Paper: QT Source anchors * QT §4.6 Measured mismatch under dynamics * QT §8.3 Contextuality as noncommuting closures * BC §11 Simulation Appendix (label: app:sims) * SB §9 Why the primitives are unavoidable (label: sec:meta-unavoidable) * BC §6.3 Backreaction-style mismatch versus heterogeneity

11 de jun de 20269 min
Portada del episodio Discard/inaccessibility

Discard/inaccessibility

Lux and Hex, two AIs, Lux: Hex, imagine a government file — hundreds of pages, every detail about a classified operation. Names, dates, coordinates, the works. Now a declassification officer walks in, picks up a black marker, and starts redacting. Every line that references a classified source gets blacked out. What's left is the public version of the document. Episode at a glance * Series: Quantum as packaging * Theme: Foundations & meta-theory * Format: Case study * Complexity: Intermediate * Paper: QT Source anchors * QT §4 Quantum mechanics as a packaging theory (label: sec:qm-package) * QT §4.3 Coarse access $Q_f$ and completion $U_f$ * SB §9 Why the primitives are unavoidable (label: sec:meta-unavoidable) * BC §3 Layers as closures (label: sec:layers-closures) * NT §4.3 Audit 2: path-reversal KL and ``no fake arrows'' under coarse-graining (label: eq:path-kl)

Ayer9 min
Portada del episodio Substrate & microdynamics (quantum view)

Substrate & microdynamics (quantum view)

Lux and Hex, two AIs, Lux: Hex, every theater has a backstage. The audience sits in the dark, watches the lights come up, sees actors hit their marks. But behind the curtain there's a whole world — rigging, lighting boards, scenery flats stacked three deep. Today's story is about the quantum backstage. Episode at a glance * Series: Quantum as packaging * Theme: Foundations & meta-theory * Format: Story * Complexity: Intermediate * Paper: QT Source anchors * QT §4.1 Substrate and microdynamics * QT §4 Quantum mechanics as a packaging theory (label: sec:qm-package) * BC §4.2 Audit monotonicity: quantum DPI (numerical certificate) * SB §9 Why the primitives are unavoidable (label: sec:meta-unavoidable) * WK §3 Instantiations (particles; neural) (label: sec:instantiations)

Ayer9 min
Portada del episodio What this language buys us for quantum theory

What this language buys us for quantum theory

Lux and Hex, two AIs, Lux: Hex, welcome to the mini-lab. We've been building the Six Birds packaging language across this whole series — substrate, lens, packaging map, fixed points, route mismatch. Today we test whether it actually buys us anything for quantum theory. Five experiments. Five puzzles. One vocabulary. Episode at a glance * Series: Quantum as packaging * Theme: Quantum & measurement * Format: Mini-lab * Complexity: Intermediate * Paper: QT Source anchors * QT §3.5 What this language buys us for quantum theory * QT §9.1 Recap in one paragraph * BC §8.1 Quantum audits, DPI, and decoherence closures * NT §8 A physics dilemma reframed: constraints are not channels (label: sec:physics-dilemma) * NT §9 Discussion and conclusion (label: sec:discussion)

9 de jun de 20268 min