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#2011 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 12:17 AM

Early Universe being Charted

 

fireworksint.jpg

 

From its orbit 930,000 miles above Earth, the Planck space telescope spent more than four years detecting the oldest light in the universe, called the cosmic microwave background. This fossil from the Big Bang fills every square inch of the sky and offers a glimpse of what the universe looked like almost 14 billion years ago, when it was just 380,000 years old. Planck's observations of this relic radiation shed light on everything from the evolution of the universe to dark matter." more>>>


 http://phys.org/news...erse-focus.html

 

fortune_teller_database.jpg



#2012 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 01:56 AM

Strongest material ever found

 

limpets (shown on a blue whale)Southern_right_whale6.jpg

Scientists at the University of Portsmouth, who made the discovery while examining limpets, say the substance could revolutionise industrial engineering

animals-clingy-limpets-break_ups-break_u


#2013 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 02:03 AM

[QA argues that every dead person must be present in a universe simulation that's detailed enough-including their minds which cannot be outside physics.]

How to Simulate the Universe on your Laptop

 

 [best public one available Feb 2015 (below)]

 

 

[The total Quantum Archaeology Grid is a moving grid of the entire cosmos in complete detail. There are reasons to think this could be achieved in enough detail to resurrect every life form human world and alien by compact mathematics. Most of the world is repetitions & variations of base formulae]

 

office-computer_simulation-virtual_reali


Edited by stopgam, 18 February 2015 - 02:15 AM.


#2014 serp777

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 02:23 AM

[QA argues that every dead person must be present in a universe simulation that's detailed enough-including their minds which cannot be outside physics.]

How to Simulate the Universe on your Laptop

 

 [best public one available Feb 2015 (below)]

 

 

[The total Quantum Archaeology Grid is a moving grid of the entire cosmos in complete detail. There are reasons to think this could be achieved in enough detail to resurrect every life form human world and alien by compact mathematics. Most of the world is repetitions & variations of base formulae]

 

office-computer_simulation-virtual_reali

 

Don't worry, well just do all this stuff, including QA with new maths. AND STATISTICS!!!!!!!!! PARTICULARLY QUANTUM STATISTICS!!

 

59065791.jpg
 


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#2015 platypus

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 11:08 AM

All of this is theory from you. In fact, its theory without supporting evidence. Where is your mathematical evidence that you can reconstruct a person's entire brain from statistical data?

 

 

"the best stats we have is quantum statistics and they are probability-based"

Yeah, and they give you probability figures. How will you use probability distributions to reconstruct the brain of a 2000 year old long dead person. Where are you acquiring the information for every particle in the brain including momentum, charge, etc? I'd like to see some hard calculations instead of assertions. We dont even have the massive zetabyte drive necessary for storing all that information about the brain either.

I think stopgam "only" needs to simulate everything that the 2000-year old brain could experience down to the level of fractions of atoms. As it is possible to see the Andromeda-Galaxy with the naked eye I think it's safe to start with the simulated radius of 2E6 light-years.  :-D


Edited by platypus, 18 February 2015 - 11:09 AM.

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#2016 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 03:36 PM

[This is a version of history in summary. As we learn acute calculation we'll accurately recount History in full color]

 

 

 

[Prototypes are the beginning point. From there you work in changes from the vast records and data bases on the environment.

I think it's doable.

The fact there is opposition to Quantum Archaeology makes me think it's a big enough subject to tackle!

One trick is seeing with multiple perspectives, and you can learn to do it.

Science isn't just advancing, it's accelerating. The next 5 years will cover more than 100 years at today's constant progress, but it's speeding up.

 

Machine intelligence will be set lose in archaeology uncovering our History then living history is simulations so complex they will look real. Look at the onward march of measurement]

 

figure1.jpg

 

We expect a paradigm shift in computing. By 2022 it'll be clear if we can solve the error problem in Quantum Computers.

 

Scientists learn to monitor neural stem cells

 

14CIRMcal.jpg

A labeling compound identified at A*STAR that specifically marks neuronal stem cells is not only a useful research tool, but could also assist clinical efforts to repair neurological damage in patients."

 http://phys.org/news...urological.html

 

 

 

 

Computational technique reveals process of condensation

anigif_enhanced-buzz-4143-1388768389-40.

 

Weiqing Ren from the A*STAR Institute of High Performance Computing and Yunzhi Li of the National University of Singapore have systematically analyzed how micropillars on a hydrophobic surface affect the condensation of water vapor. To do this, they used a powerful computational technique known as the string method, which Ren developed in a previous study.

Ren and Li used the technique to investigate the effect of parameters such as the height and spacing of the micropillars and the supersaturation and intrinsic wettability of the surface on the condensation process. They discovered that both the pathway and configuration of the initial nucleus from which droplets form ― known as the critical nucleus ― depends on the geometry of the surface patterns. In particular, the scientists found that for tall, closely spaced pillars on a surface with a low supersaturation and low wettability, the critical nucleus prefers the suspended state, whereas for the opposite case it prefers the impaled state. By generating a phase diagram, they could determine the critical values of the geometrical parameters at which the configuration of the critical nucleus changes from the suspended state to the impaled state."


http://phys.org/news...ars-affect.html

 

200703282.jpg


Edited by stopgam, 18 February 2015 - 04:33 PM.


#2017 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 03:58 PM

100-funny-cat-animated-gifs-96.gif

The experimental physicist

 

Measurement Accelerates

Facial recognition breakthrough: 'Deep Dense' software spots faces in images even if they're partially hidden or UPSIDE DOWN

 

    Algorithm was built by Yahoo Labs in California and Stanford University
    It built on Viola-Jones algorithm which spots front-facing images of people
    Researchers used a form of machine learning known as a deep convolutional neural network.    This involves training a computer to spot features in a database of images.  The algorithm can identify faces from various angles, when part of the face is hidden and even upside down. It doesn't recognise who a face belongs to, but could be trained to do so. " more
face_recognition_system.png

 

[[Obviously this wont stop with the face, nor with surface scanning: nor with the present, nor with what is onloy observable, but will/is advancing to what is calculable, representing it in simulations.]

 

1--1331726-Moving%20of%203D%20skeleton.a

[We hope/expect to go into the world of the very small - which seems spooky @ present - and do prediction/retrodiction there. The scale of such work makes you gasp, but coming machines will find it routine]

nature11341-f3.2.jpg

 

http://www.dailymail...l#ixzz3S70qZz5I

 

science-chemistry-chemists-laboratory-sc


Edited by stopgam, 18 February 2015 - 04:46 PM.


#2018 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 04:03 PM

Researchers grow miniature functioning organs on plastic chips - and hope to replicate an entire body

 

[This heralds digitalized human beings & mind uploading.]

 

 

25CCAAF900000578-2958510-The_lung_on_a_c

A computer memory stick-sized chip is created from a flexible polymer so that it has microscopic channels.

The techniques used to make them are the same as those used to create microchips.

A porous flexible membrane is placed inside one of the channels and human cells from the airways are grown on top of it.

On the opposite side cells from a human capillary blood vessel are grown.

Nutrient rich fluid like human blood that can carry away oxygen is flowed down the channel on the same side as the blood vessel cells.

The airway cells are left exposed to the air.

This mimics the way the lungs work" more>>>

 http://www.dailymail...l#ixzz3S74onkV2
 

science-scientists-experiments-researche


Edited by stopgam, 18 February 2015 - 04:07 PM.


#2019 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 04:16 PM

page29-1009-full.jpg

 

Oldest grass ever found

 

 

discovered encased in amber
100-million-year-old

 

amberfossill.jpg
"new study of the oldest grass ever found, which was discovered encased in amber in Myanmar. The 100-million-year-old fossilized grass is host to Palaeoclaviceps parasiticus, an extinct parasite similar to the fungus ergot, which is known for producing intense side effects like hallucinations and convulsions when consumed -- and can even be deadly.
giphy.gif
“It seems like ergot has been involved with animals and humans almost forever, and now we know that this fungus literally dates back to the earliest evolution of grasses," Dr. George Poinar, Jr., a paleo-entomologist at Oregon State University and the study's lead author, said in a written statement.“There’s no doubt in my mind that it would have been eaten by sauropod dinosaurs, although we can’t know what exact effect it had on them.”

http://www.huffingto..._n_6661670.html


Edited by stopgam, 18 February 2015 - 04:21 PM.


#2020 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 04:28 PM

All data can fit on a DNA hard drive the size of a teaspoon

[this answers critics of QA who say there isn't enough computer storage  enough to calculate the past]

 

TechFeature_JanFeb08_fig1.gif

 

A group of researchers at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology have found a way to encode data onto DNA—the very same stuff that all living beings’ genetic information is stored on—that could survive for millennia.
One gram of DNA can potentially hold up to 455 exabytes of data, according to the New Scientist. For reference: There are one billion gigabytes in an exabyte, and 1,000 exabytes in a zettabyte. The cloud computing company EMC estimated that there were 1.8 zettabytes of data in the world in 2011, which means we would need only about 4 grams (about a teaspoon) of DNA to hold everything from Plato through the complete works of Shakespeare to Beyonce’s latest album (not to mention every brunch photo ever posted on Instagram)." more>>

 

http://qz.com/345640...-of-a-teaspoon/

 

cinnamon-teaspoon-fail-o.gif

 



#2021 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 04:42 PM

Observation of the small Advances

]Like sci-fi  -which preceders science & technology]

 

lcls-banner-576.jpg

 

"Linac Coherent Light Source is being used to see how atoms and molecules move in living systems.

The machine is a billion times more intense than the previous generation of lasers.
Each X-ray pulse has as much power as the national grid of a large country, and a hundred are produced every second."

 

more

 

http://www.bbc.com/n...onment-31483781

 

[Miniaturisation and increased manipulation of the very small are a trend that has held since the birth of science]

 

little-patient.jpg



#2022 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 04:57 PM

The World Getting Richer

 

 

World_GDP_per_capita_1500_to_2003.png

 

Jobs may disappear thru A.I. and robotics (more likely they'll change) and company taxes will fund Universal Basic Income -all Europeans Parties now support this- but the world is getting richer at a faster rate.



#2023 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 05:04 PM

BBC News - Could driverless cars own themselves?

 

_80754234_2b83bd1a-8a19-4fc0-87fb-fd6e26

 

 

driverless-car-13.png


Edited by stopgam, 18 February 2015 - 05:12 PM.


#2024 platypus

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 05:55 PM

All data can fit on a DNA hard drive the size of a teaspoon

[this answers critics of QA who say there isn't enough computer storage  enough to calculate the past]

 

Ok so a gram of DNA can store 455 exabytes ~=  4E21 bits. That is quite respectable but lets compare it to the initialization requirements of the QA-grid:

 

- 1 bit per 3D voxel

- length of side of voxel = Planck length = 1.6E-35 meters

- length of side of grid = 2000 light-years 

-> number of voxels per side of grid = 1.17E56

-> total number of voxels = 1.6E168 which is also the number of bits needed to store the initial state. 

 

The mass of DNA needed to store 1.6E168 bits = 4E146 grams, which is about 2E113 solar masses. Note that the estimated number of particles in this universe is 1E82 so even if you're trying to assign just one particle per each needed solar-massed DNA-storage unit you are going to run out of this universe about 31 orders of magnitude before the system is complete. I would hazard a guess that this kind of QA-system will never be built :)

 

http://www.universet...n-the-universe/


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#2025 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 06:40 PM

 

Ok so a gram of DNA can store 455 exabytes ~=  4E21 bits. That is quite respectable but lets compare it to the initialization requirements of the QA-grid:


 

 

- 1 bit per 3D voxel

- length of side of voxel = Planck length = 1.6E-35 meters

- length of side of grid = 2000 light-years 

-> number of voxels per side of grid = 1.17E56

-> total number of voxels = 1.6E168 which is also the number of bits needed to store the initial state. 

 

The mass of DNA needed to store 1.6E168 bits = 4E146 grams, which is about 2E113 solar masses. Note that the estimated number of particles in this universe is 1E82 so even if you're trying to assign just one particle per each needed solar-massed DNA-storage unit you are going to run out of this universe about 31 orders of magnitude before the system is complete. I would hazard a guess that this kind of QA-system will never be built :)

 

http://www.universet...n-the-universe/

 

 

 :) Indeed I thought I was sticking my neck out on DNA storage! It is one route but no way exhaustive.

 

We should co-write aLongecity/Kurzweil forums book on this as you seem to understand science! I wondered whether books would be obsolete but even more are published.

 

I dont think storage need be used like that. It's simpler to do like that of course, but even now there's too much data to use without A.I.'s, and my idea is to inflate it where you needs it. You obviously cant look at the whole universe at once even in the limited detail we have (the Illustris Simulation)

 

Large-scale_structure_formation.gif

 

You just need variables and grid references. You inflate the bits you need. For resurrecting people you dont need the whole universe just coordinates.

So you store the math as recopies for the components you need, and draw them into detailed configurations.

 

Inflating uses components which are identical.

Simulations of the present and past universe are already being built and you can see the trend how many moving part is increasing

 

Illustris Simulation

"A total of 19 million CPU hours was required, using 8,192 CPU cores.[1] The peak memory usage was approximately 25 TB of RAM.[1] A total of 136 snapshots were saved over the course of the simulation, totaling over 230 TB cumulative data volume.[2]"

 

Although this is miles away from your figures,  it is possible to store by inflatables.

 

When we want to draft a prototype Neanderthal (later to personalise to the exact dead person) we reach into the lattice of components and inflate them. This is presently done by people but machines are coming that will do it zillions of times faster.

 

2008-04speaks2.jpg

"Using 50,000-year-old fossils from France and a computer synthesizer, McCarthy’s team has generated a recording of how a Neanderthal would pronounce the letter “e.”  (Click here to listen to McCarthy's simulation of a Neanderthal voice.)

 

http://www.fau.edu/e...08-04speaks.php

 

 

medical-medical_reform-nhs-government_in



#2026 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 06:54 PM

Data Bases will help construct Dead People

 

List of online databases

 

eg Biological data bases

 

[Look at the relatives pattern in biology. Patterns exist in all data and the fun is finding short-cuts to interpret and call up what you need. Everything past and present and all dimension wise is related by laws and therefore describable - absolutely -  by laws.]

the-great-tree-of-life_505ba0c07cda2.gif

 

There are zillions (and growing) others.

 

A leap will come when we can synthesise them! There is a flood of youth into Statistics as a career. They've got til 2022 when A.I.'s will do their stuff!

 

2014CJ_fig_5.png

 

pie-chart-cartoon1.gif?w=385&h=462

 

 

Modelling the weather

snow-angular_2477277k.jpg

 

"data from satellites and ground stations all over the world is constantly being fed into supercomputers that predict what will happen in the following 24 hours and beyond.

The more data there is, the more computing power is needed to make the prediction. The Met Office currently takes in 106 million observations a day from weather balloons, satellites and commercial aeroplanes around the world. Its existing supercomputer then integrates the weather observations into modelling software to predict the world's weather.

 

Paul Sellwood, the Met Office's lead for high-performance computing, explains that one of the problems with providing a precise local weather forecast is that the information coming in is changing all the time. "If a farmer ploughs a field, that changes the relationship between the moisture and surface heat in that area," he says. "It's impossible to model a system perfectly."

 

[It wont stay like that!]

 

more>>

http://eandt.theiet....mputer-1502.cfm

 


Edited by stopgam, 18 February 2015 - 07:30 PM.


#2027 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 07:16 PM

oldie

 


Edited by stopgam, 18 February 2015 - 07:27 PM.


#2028 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 08:13 PM



#2029 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 08:25 PM

[code breaking has loads of similar stuff for Quantum Archaeology ( eg mathematics, statistics, deciphering), and if we can swing setting up a department of QA we might poach  talents form the security services?]

 


Edited by stopgam, 18 February 2015 - 09:19 PM.


#2030 Julia36

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Posted 18 February 2015 - 09:43 PM

It's Started!

 

Nanobots enter blood stream of living mammals to cure

 

[This wasn't due for 2 years]

 

New-Nanobots.jpg

 

"Researchers have completed the first successful tests of nanoparticles – which are targeted to go where they are needed – in mice, and hope to soon to conduct the first patient trials.

The nanoparticles are designed to latch on to hard plaques in the arteries, made from fat cholesterol and calcium, which cause heart disease.

Once they reach their target, the "drones" release a drug derived from a natural protein that repairs inflammation damage in the body.

Each of the tiny particles, made from a plastic-like material, is 1,000 times smaller than the tip of a human hair." more>>>

 

 

 

http://www.telegraph...rt-attacks.html

 

[Implications of this are massive]

 

nanobots.png


Edited by stopgam, 18 February 2015 - 09:45 PM.


#2031 Julia36

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Posted 19 February 2015 - 01:02 AM

State of the Universe Address Feb 2015



#2032 platypus

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Posted 19 February 2015 - 10:45 AM

What is the good starting-point for the QA simulation? Do you for example need to simulate the evolution of all life (= life of all living things) exactly right or can you start from the emergence of Homo Sapiens? In the latter case I guess you would still need to simulate the life of every member of the species correctly down to the synapse-level? 



#2033 serp777

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Posted 19 February 2015 - 06:28 PM

What is the good starting-point for the QA simulation? Do you for example need to simulate the evolution of all life (= life of all living things) exactly right or can you start from the emergence of Homo Sapiens? In the latter case I guess you would still need to simulate the life of every member of the species correctly down to the synapse-level? 

 

There is no good starting place. The universe is non deterministic. Even if you had all of the initial conditions the universe would not turn out the same way, particularly something as subject to random chance as evolution. Its likely you wouldnt end up with humans--something entirely different or maybe no life at all.



#2034 Julia36

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Posted 19 February 2015 - 07:40 PM

Prediction Shines found in Armenia

 

[Bronze age]

IMG_3319.jpg

cropped-IMG_02532.jpg

1--Shrines-unearthed.jpg?1424236898

EBtomb-1.jpg

 

the_monastery_of_geghard____armenia.jpg

[Accurate prediction gives a survival advantage!]

 

"Three shrines, dating back about 3,300 years, have been discovered within a hilltop fortress at Gegharot, in Armenia.

Local rulers at the time likely used the shrines for divination, a practice aimed at predicting the future, the archaeologists involved in the discovery say." more>>>

 

http://www.livescien...-uncovered.html

 

gardening-lawn_care-druids-landmark-mole


Edited by stopgam, 19 February 2015 - 07:42 PM.


#2035 Julia36

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Posted 19 February 2015 - 07:51 PM

New Microscope to be developed

 

Cell_Scientists_Illustration.jpg

 

"Computational biology has now matured to a point where its descriptions of cellular systems and processes can be compared, in many cases, to direct observation. And the degree of realism reached lets us consider the computational approach to be a new kind of microscopy," 

 

"The engineering efforts of the last decades have led to the creation of powerful computational machines that often require more space than a modern swimming pool. These machines permit researchers to observe intracellular processes in action by simulating the fundamental laws of Nature inside a computer.

 

These simulations carry invaluable information as, for example, they have the unique power to enlighten how the function of an entire biological system (e.g. a cell) relies on seemingly puny quantum effects that involve electronic degrees of freedom. The knowledge of these small effects is, however, essential as many critical molecular processes rely on them, such as for example disease development or drug action."

more>>>

 

http://www.eurekaler...d-1et020215.php



#2036 Julia36

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Posted 19 February 2015 - 08:21 PM

 

What is the good starting-point for the QA simulation? Do you for example need to simulate the evolution of all life (= life of all living things) exactly right or can you start from the emergence of Homo Sapiens? In the latter case I guess you would still need to simulate the life of every member of the species correctly down to the synapse-level? 

 

There is no good starting place. The universe is non deterministic. Even if you had all of the initial conditions the universe would not turn out the same way, particularly something as subject to random chance as evolution. Its likely you wouldnt end up with humans--something entirely different or maybe no life at all.

 

 

[Arguments for Quantum Theory dont do much for me because  "no-one understands Quantum Theory".

 

Galileo's first law:

"Observation before explanation"

 

 

 

Things pop spontaneously in and out of existence with no causes nor effects

 

Quantum Mechanics and Relativity are in direct conflict : they cant both be true.

 

Things may look spooky until you see what happening. To advance non-causality on statistics alone is folly.

 

Quantum physicists should have their funding stopped.

 

"Oh yes we've developed a quantum computer (D Wave) but no-one's allowed to know how it's working." Get real! (sic)

 

Cause & Effect and Quantum Mechanics must agree or science is flawed.

I am suspicious of anyone stepping up and trying to explain quantum theory, especially people claiming to understand it. In my limited experience a good theory is elegant and simplifying.

 

There may be (dHooft) a laws set under the quantum world - entirely causal- and we are only working with the surface in Quantum Theory.

 

However classical physics can be used for the present work in Resurrection, and A.I.'s will discover the necessary science of the very small.]

 

emperor.jpg

Quantum Theory. No-one knows what it is. No-one can observe it. It contradicts known science. No-one can examine D Waves' Quantum Computer.


Edited by stopgam, 19 February 2015 - 08:43 PM.


#2037 Julia36

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Posted 19 February 2015 - 08:26 PM

What is the good starting-point for the QA simulation? Do you for example need to simulate the evolution of all life (= life of all living things) exactly right or can you start from the emergence of Homo Sapiens? In the latter case I guess you would still need to simulate the life of every member of the species correctly down to the synapse-level? 

 

[A good place to start is the construction of a Quantum Archaeology Grid

The Quantum Archaeology Grid is a dimensional grid sketched by plotting known events through history then drawing in the relational lines connecting them. The relational lines are dictated by the laws of science whose shapes are dictated by the events.]

field.jpg?height=300&width=400



#2038 Julia36

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Posted 19 February 2015 - 08:37 PM

On 10 Breakthrough Technologies

MIT Technology Review (blog)-
 
sub_1136.jpg?w=1024&h=576

Every year, MIT Technology Review selects the 10 technologies we believe are the greatest breakthroughs of previous months, those that in ..

 

http://www.technolog...hnologies/2015/

 

deranged-quantum-physicist1.jpg


Edited by stopgam, 19 February 2015 - 09:23 PM.


#2039 Julia36

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Posted 19 February 2015 - 09:15 PM

WSJCartoonCrop.jpg

 

"Bell, Against 'measurement' http://www.tau.ac.il.../IQM/BellAM.pdf

Tsirelson, This non-axiomatizable quantum theory http://cds.cern.ch/r...s/P00021853.pdf

Laloë, Do we really understand quantum mechanics http://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0209123

Wallace, The Quantum Measurement Problem: State of Play http://arxiv.org/abs/0712.0149

For Bohmian Mechanics, some free articles are
Passon http://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0611032
Oriols and Mompart http://arxiv.org/abs/1206.1084" physics forum

 

[In this thread I've tried to show how science is advancing by listing discoveries and trends.

 

On Quantum Vs Classical Physics, it doesn't which/ something else is proven for Quantum Archaeology, because laws will exist, and where there are laws there is always prediction / retrodiction.

 

Nothing exists in isolation, everything has similars, prototypes are possible with almost all things - from which unique states can be drafted following laws.

 

Every is created ONLY  by preceding events. That is causation. Probability is causation but on large numbers done aggregately.

 

Until we can make instruments to see into the world of the small we could do well to avoid explanations of quantum phenomena and just record what the maths says.]

 

science-quantum_theory-theory-scientist-


Edited by stopgam, 19 February 2015 - 09:27 PM.


#2040 Julia36

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Posted 19 February 2015 - 09:35 PM

QUANTUM ARCHAEOLOGY.

How Science is trying to resurrect the dead.


Micro Map of the past being created.

  • Quantum computers and new maths to calculate detailed histories and memories of everyone dead.
  • Face and body reconstructions a million years old already achieved: mind reconstructions coming.
  • 106 billion people to be resurrected within 40 years.

MAIN ARTICLE:~~>(working: Nine pages)
QuantumArchaeology


029a53d4ba8e0529c2e174bcb942e0fac4b9d9f9

TEDxDeExctinction talks website »

<--- MORE INFORMATION BACK THRU THIS THREAD<------

 

 

Mouse given human brain

pic4.jpg

humans are equipped with tiny differences in a particular regulator of gene activity, dubbed HARE5, that when introduced into a mouse embryo, led to a 12% bigger brain than in the embryos treated with the HARE5 sequence from chimpanzees." more>>>

http://phys.org/news...-human-dna.html

 

mouse-injected-human-brain.jpg

==========================================================

 

 

Animals tend to evolve toward larger size over time

 

mammals-worked-hard-to-become-large-rhin

 

Does evolution follow certain rules? If, in the words of the famed evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould, one could "rewind the tape of life", would certain biological trends reemerge? Asked another way: can evolution be predicted?

New research suggests that, for at least one important biological trait-body size-the answer is yes.

In one of the most comprehensive studies of body size evolution ever conducted, Stanford scientists have found fresh support for Cope's rule, a theory in biology that states that animal lineages tend to evolve toward larger sizes over time.

"We've known for some time now that the largest organisms alive today are larger than the largest organisms that were alive when life originated or even when animals first evolved," said Jonathan Payne, a paleobiologist at Stanford's School of Earth, Energy & Environmental Sciences.>>> MORE


http://phys.org/news...arger-size.html

literature-collectible-gadget-antique-va


Edited by stopgam, 19 February 2015 - 09:43 PM.





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