The fuzziness and weird logic of the way particles behave applies surprisingly well to how humans think

The quantum world defies the rules of ordinary logic. Particles routinely occupy two or more places at the same time and don't even have well-defined properties until they are measured. It's all strange, yet true - quantum theory is the most accurate scientific theory ever tested and its mathematics is perfectly suited to the weirdness of the atomic world.

Yet that mathematics actually stands on its own, quite independent of the theory. Indeed, much of it was invented well before quantum theory even existed, notably by German mathematician David Hilbert. Now, it's beginning to look as if it might apply to a lot more than just quantum physics, and quite possibly even to the way people think.

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"This is an old idea we were thinking about in the 1970's as described in The Dancing Wu Li Masters and David Kaiser's new book and other books." - Jack Sarfatti