An investigation into how war games, worst-case scenarios, complex systems,…
Project Q: War, Peace, and Quantum Mechanics
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As governments, corporations and universities pour funds into quantum science, and breakthroughs in quantum technology gather pace, important questions about the reality of a quantum future remain unanswered. In a notoriously complex field where ignorance is matched by hype, PROJECT Q seeks to develop a multidisciplinary fluency in all things quantum.
PROJECT Q brings together physicists, philosophers and policymakers, military specialists, social scientists and international relations experts to explore critical questions:
• How will quantum technologies change the world?
• What is the ‘quantum race’? Who is winning and who is losing?
• How can the nuclear arms and space races help us understand the quantum race?
• What are the risks and benefits of quantum innovation to global peace and security?
• In an increasingly interconnected world can quantum theory provide new models for global politics?
"Project Q is a compelling documentary that dives into the rapidly advancing world of quantum science, highlighting the massive investments by governments, corporations, and universities while probing the unanswered questions about humankind's quantum future. Der Derian's film masterfully brings together a diverse group of experts to discuss the profound implications of quantum theory. By exploring both risks and benefits of quantum innovation, this film offers a multidisciplinary perspective on how the emerging suite of quantum technologies might reshape global peace, security, and politics. A must watch for anyone interested in developing quantum literacy." Mauritz Kop, Founding Director, Stanford Center for Responsible Quantum Technology, Stanford University
"Project Q and James Der Derian have been at the forefront of a highly original and imaginative initiative to make the relevance of quantum mechanics more apparent to many students of world politics who are still beholden to the physics of the late 19th century. This documentary will be of enormous help for instructors, students, and interested lay persons." Peter J. Katzenstein, Professor of International Studies, Cornell University
"The quantum revolution is one of the most important scientific revolutions in our lifetime, upending our traditional ideas about truth, time, and cause, and this important and incisive film provides a map for students and citizens about how these ideas affect the core political issues of our time. Project Q is remarkable for its capacity to translate complex ideas in theoretical physics and geopolitics into plain language suitable for a general or classroom audience. A perfect film for science, social science, and everything in superposition!" Mark Salter, Professor of Political Studies, University of Ottawa
"I am glad to see a thoroughly investigated documentary that shows the general public how different actors imagine our world through quantum. I hope this film sparks the debate and scrutiny our world deserves as we develop these game-changing technologies." Rodrigo Araiza Bravo, Physics PhD, Harvard University, early Co-founder, Quantum Ethics Project
"Project Q is a tour-de-force that brings to life the history and future of quantum physics. The quantum revolution and its impacts are still little understood. This film provides a vivid look at quantum science and associated technologies, and their implications for what it means to be human and the nature of reality. Especially relevant in an era of increasing artificial intelligence, Project Q is essential for anyone interested in humanity's prospects for flourishing in the face of uncertainty." Chris Laszlo, PhD, Professor of Organizational Behavior, Case Western Reserve University, Author, Quantum Leadership: New Consciousness in Business
"Quantum mechanics has spawned spectacular technological advances that control much of the modern world. Quantum physics is poised to trigger a second great technological revolution by merging with that other transformative marvel - information technology. Quantum information technology looks set to deliver exponentially more powerful computers, a brand-new internet and advanced sensors of breath-taking precision. Some of its applications look like nothing short of magic. The documentary Project Q surveys the perplexing world of the quantum and outlines its tantalizing potential for upending our most basic assumptions about the universe and our place within it." Paul Davies, Regents' Professor of Physics, Director, Beyond Center for Fundamental Concepts in Science, Arizona State University, Author, The Demon in the Machine
"A significant new advance in technology appears to be coming with the rapid advances in quantum computing. Project Q makes the case that we, as a society, should be alert to the consequences of such new technologies and not fall into the trap of only responding to technologies after they have taken root. The film embraces a wide variety of viewpoints and succeeds in its laudable goal of raising general awareness of this emerging technology, and will no doubt encourage its viewers to want to learn more about the field and its potential implications for all of us." Donald Spector, Professor and Chair of Physics, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
"For anyone serious about preserving security and saving the planet, Project Q is the most consequential documentary anywhere." Ted Bogosian, filmmaker and Visiting Assistant Professor of the Practice of Humanities, Brown University
"We are only scratching the surface of the depth and scope of the quantum revolution - this documentary nicely illustrates what the revolution is and the profound implications for our world." Chris McIntosh, Assistant Professor of Political Studies, Bard College
"The Project Q team has connected fundamental discoveries in quantum mechanics through generations of cutting-edge technological developments to the most pressing political issues of today and tomorrow. Project Q: War, Peace, and Quantum Mechanics will be a fantastic addition to social science, humanities, and natural science courses alike. This film is exactly what is needed to help students approach the world from interdisciplinary perspectives." Michael Murphy, Centre for International and Defense Policy, Queen's University
"[This is] a documentary that explores the complex topic of Quantum and its implications for humanity through the lens of multiple disciplines and subjects, creating a broader view and understanding of the impact of this promising science." Reena Dayal, CEO, Quantum Ecosystems and Technology Council of India
"As the second quantum century begins to transform human existence on a planetary scale, this film highlights several of the most important issues raised by the current wave of quantum breakthroughs, told through a rich diversity of voices and perspectives." Larry George, Professor of Political Science, California State University-Long Beach
"Project Q is a tour de force that will provoke your senses in ways that changes the way you look at our world." Sebastian Kaempf, Associate Professor in Peace and Conflict Studies, University of Queensland
"Project Q illuminates the historical and contemporary entanglement of science, geopolitics, war and philosophy, showing how quantum mechanics has much wider implications than we thought, and making a compelling case for why we should care about it today." Italo Brandimarte, PhD Candidate in Politics and International Studies, University of Cambridge
"This rich compendium of leading voices engaging the deeply urgent yet also 'spooky effects' of the quantum in our present and near future is highly recommended for the curious-minded amongst the concerned citizens of the world." Jeffrey Kripal, Chair in Philosophy and Religious Thought, Rice University, Author, The Flip: Epiphanies of Mind and the Future of Knowledge
Citation
Main credits
Der Derian, James (film director)
Der Derian, James (screenwriter)
Der Derian, James (film producer)
Der Derian, James (narrator)
Other credits
Editor and camera, José Torrealba, Jack McGrath.
Distributor subjects
No distributor subjects provided.Keywords
[00:00:01.02]
[dark ambient music]
[00:01:05.01]
[discussion in German]
[00:01:07.04]
- [Interviewer] Nein,
nein, nein, nein, nein.
[00:01:08.09]
- Can I gesture a little bit?
[00:01:10.03]
Will you be able to get the gestures in?
[00:01:12.04]
- [Cameraman] No.
- [Interviewer] Not really.
[00:01:13.05]
- [Cameraman] I would see them, but...
[00:01:15.08]
- But I'd like to gesture a little.
[00:01:17.01]
- Of course.
[00:01:18.09]
- [Cameraman] If you come
half a step in front, yeah.
[00:01:21.01]
That's it.
[00:01:23.02]
Okay, rolling.
[00:01:25.01]
- [Interviewer] James, why is it,
[00:01:26.03]
do we have any explanation for it,
[00:01:28.01]
that there are so many streets,
[00:01:30.07]
places named after a socialist, communist
[00:01:34.09]
in the eastern part of Berlin?
[00:01:36.07]
- Well, every regime wants
[00:01:38.05]
to stamp its identity
on the urban landscape,
[00:01:42.04]
particularly one that's...
[00:01:43.02]
My quantum journey began with
a street fight in Berlin.
[00:01:46.02]
I had come to the
American Academy in Berlin
[00:01:49.02]
to write a book about the
making of "Human Terrain,"
[00:01:51.09]
a documentary film about
the US military's effort
[00:01:55.03]
to enlist American
academics in the front lines
[00:01:58.03]
of the counterinsurgency
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
[00:02:02.06]
It was not meant to be.
[00:02:04.08]
Before I had even unpacked my bags,
[00:02:07.00]
I was asked to write an opinion piece
[00:02:09.00]
for the "Berliner Zeitung."
[00:02:11.01]
Seeking inspiration and some
relief from the jet lag,
[00:02:14.02]
I took a long ramble through the city.
[00:02:16.05]
Every other street seemed to bear the name
[00:02:18.06]
of a famous philosopher,
general, or statesman,
[00:02:22.09]
with more than a few named
after American presidents.
[00:02:25.07]
There was even one for the
radical anarchist of the 1960s,
[00:02:29.04]
Rudi Dutschke.
[00:02:31.08]
By the end of my psycho-geographic drift,
[00:02:34.01]
my head had cleared.
[00:02:36.00]
I had found a topic for the
op-ed: "The Missing President."
[00:02:40.03]
After all, the following week
would be the 50th anniversary
[00:02:43.04]
of President Eisenhower's
farewell address.
[00:02:45.08]
- Good evening, my fellow Americans.
[00:02:48.00]
- [James] The one where he famously warned
[00:02:49.07]
against the unwarranted influence
[00:02:52.00]
of a military industrial complex,
[00:02:54.09]
but also the danger that public
policy could itself become
[00:02:58.03]
the captive of a scientific
technological elite.
[00:03:01.02]
- My special thanks go to them
[00:03:03.01]
for the opportunity of
addressing you this evening.
[00:03:07.04]
- [James] I decided to ask why Berlin,
[00:03:09.02]
the capital of the country
[00:03:10.08]
that he had helped
liberate in World War II,
[00:03:13.01]
had no street named for Ike,
no Eisenhower Strasse.
[00:03:18.01]
Once dropped into the media pool,
[00:03:19.07]
my small and insignificant
op-ed began to spookily interact
[00:03:23.09]
with new waves of information.
[00:03:26.04]
[upbeat electronic music]
[00:03:31.06]
Barely a month later,
I found myself in the back
[00:03:34.04]
of an unmarked van with a
Deutsche Welle television crew,
[00:03:38.01]
speeding around Berlin and
providing on-camera commentary
[00:03:41.09]
as we did drive-by shoots of
streets bearing famous names.
[00:03:45.08]
- [Reporter] And if you're
specifically looking
[00:03:47.01]
for monuments to Ronald Reagan...
[00:03:48.09]
- [James] We ended up
at the Brandenburg Gate
[00:03:50.06]
in front of the US Embassy.
[00:03:53.07]
- [Reporter] American officials feel
[00:03:55.03]
that the year in which
Reagan would've turned 100
[00:03:58.02]
is an apt time for the city to honor him.
[00:04:03.04]
[Speaking in German language]
[00:04:05.03]
- [Interpreter] We'd love to
see any symbol of recognition
[00:04:07.05]
of Ronald Reagan and
his legacy for Berlin.
[00:04:12.07]
I believe the early end
[00:04:13.08]
of the Cold War had
significant implications
[00:04:16.05]
for Berlin and its people.
[00:04:18.06]
- [Reporter] Nancy and Ronald Reagan
[00:04:19.09]
during their famous visit
to West Berlin back in 1987.
[00:04:24.05]
- Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate.
[00:04:28.03]
[audience cheering]
[00:04:32.03]
Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall.
[00:04:36.04]
[audience cheering]
[00:04:38.05]
- [Reporter] Two years later,
the wall indeed came down.
[00:04:42.07]
Would the Americans be glad
[00:04:44.00]
to see this prominent square
renamed after Ronald Reagan?
[00:04:51.03]
[laughing]
[00:04:55.08]
- [James] The fact that neither Reagan
[00:04:57.03]
or Eisenhower got a street name
was lost in a bigger reveal,
[00:05:01.03]
delivered years later in a speech
[00:05:02.08]
by President Reagan's
own Secretary of State,
[00:05:05.06]
George Shultz.
[00:05:08.09]
- I have a physicist friend
at Stanford named Sid Drell,
[00:05:12.03]
who has given me the concept
of quantum diplomacy.
[00:05:17.06]
An axiom of quantum theory
is that when you observe
[00:05:21.02]
and measure some piece of a system,
[00:05:23.02]
you inevitably disturb the whole system.
[00:05:26.07]
So the process of observation
itself is a cause of change.
[00:05:32.04]
- And behind us, we have...
[00:05:33.06]
That day in Berlin,
[00:05:34.06]
in front of a camera with
Marx and Engels behind me,
[00:05:38.01]
George Shultz's message became the medium.
[00:05:41.01]
War, peace and quantum
mechanics were entangled,
[00:05:44.07]
and my quantum journey began.
[00:05:46.05]
We use language, we use names.
[00:05:49.05]
[Cameraman speaking in German language]
[00:05:50.09]
- [Interviewer] Ah, okay, I
moved into the picture, sorry.
[00:05:54.09]
- Okay.
[00:05:56.01]
- [Interviewer] Could you make
it a little bit more brief?
[00:06:00.07]
[dark ambient music]
[00:06:23.05]
[ragtime jazz music]
[00:06:24.08]
- [James] In 1927, the
world's leading scientists
[00:06:27.04]
gathered in Brussels to
make sense of three decades
[00:06:30.05]
of new discoveries in
physics and chemistry.
[00:06:33.04]
17 of the 29 attending
were or would become
[00:06:36.08]
Nobel Prize laureates,
[00:06:38.03]
including Marie Curie,
the only woman at Solvay,
[00:06:41.05]
but also the only scientist
who received two Nobel Prizes.
[00:06:45.04]
Max Planck was there,
[00:06:46.07]
who coined the concept of quanta in 1900.
[00:06:50.07]
German scientists who had been banned
[00:06:52.07]
from earlier post-war conferences
[00:06:54.09]
were welcomed back at Brussels.
[00:06:56.09]
In a singular display
of interwar solidarity,
[00:07:00.00]
leading scientists from over a
dozen countries were captured
[00:07:03.01]
in an amateur movie taken by
the physicist Irving Langmuir,
[00:07:06.06]
using his own 16 millimeter
Bell and Howell camera.
[00:07:10.01]
We see leaving the conference Niels Bohr
[00:07:12.04]
and Erwin Schrodinger,
[00:07:15.02]
Werner Heisenberg,
[00:07:17.04]
Paul Dirac,
[00:07:19.04]
Max Born,
[00:07:22.03]
Louis de Broglie,
[00:07:25.03]
Wolfgang Pauli,
[00:07:28.07]
and of course Albert Einstein.
[00:07:32.06]
Madame Curie does a little dance.
[00:07:35.07]
Paul Ehrenfest mugs for the camera.
[00:07:39.00]
These remarkable scientists
would intuit, debate
[00:07:42.02]
and eventually be proven
right by experiments
[00:07:45.08]
that the quanta in the form of photons
[00:07:48.05]
and electrons could exist
as both waves and particles
[00:07:51.04]
until observed.
[00:07:53.05]
The position and speed could
not be simultaneously measured.
[00:07:58.07]
They could correlate non-locally
across vast distances.
[00:08:03.00]
They had opposing spins and
could not occupy the same space.
[00:08:08.07]
And that a cat in a
box could be both alive
[00:08:11.07]
and dead at the same time.
[00:08:16.09]
These principles of
complementarity, uncertainty,
[00:08:21.07]
the wave function,
superposition, exclusion,
[00:08:28.02]
and entanglement would
become the foundation
[00:08:32.01]
of a revolutionary new theory of physics,
[00:08:35.07]
quantum mechanics.
[00:08:38.05]
Quantum mechanics would
rock many of the scientific
[00:08:41.01]
as well as philosophical
truths of the 20th century.
[00:08:44.02]
The theory repudiated
much of Newtonian physics
[00:08:46.08]
at the subatomic level.
[00:08:48.08]
It bent classical conceptions
about space and time
[00:08:51.07]
at the cosmological level.
[00:08:54.02]
It cast into doubt assumptions
about causality, prediction,
[00:08:58.07]
and an observer-independent reality
[00:09:00.07]
at the metaphysical level.
[00:09:05.06]
Eventually giving rise to
new disruptive technologies,
[00:09:09.06]
quantum mechanics would
change geopolitics forever.
[00:09:15.04]
The fifth Solvay Conference on
Physics was a high watermark
[00:09:18.09]
of international scientific cooperation.
[00:09:21.08]
However, the amateur film
ends with a premonition
[00:09:24.04]
of a darker future that might lie ahead.
[00:09:27.01]
Like many of the other
principles enshrined
[00:09:29.01]
in the covenant of the League of Nations,
[00:09:31.00]
scientific internationalism
would not survive the rise
[00:09:33.07]
of antisemitism, militarism,
and totalitarianism.
[00:09:39.00]
With Hitler's ascension to power in 1933,
[00:09:41.06]
quantum mechanics became
identified as a Jewish physics.
[00:09:45.07]
Not even Werner Heisenberg,
[00:09:47.03]
who would later head the Nazi
Germany's atomic bomb program,
[00:09:51.03]
would escape accusations
of being a "White Jew"
[00:09:54.07]
for his past affiliation with the ideas
[00:09:56.08]
and creators of quantum mechanics.
[00:10:00.06]
In 1939, the key Solvay scientists,
[00:10:03.03]
many of them now refugees
from European fascism,
[00:10:06.04]
would gather again at Einstein's new home,
[00:10:08.05]
the Institute for Advanced
Study in Princeton.
[00:10:11.06]
They had come to hash out
their theoretical differences
[00:10:14.01]
about quantum mechanics,
[00:10:16.02]
but powerful forces were
about to be unleashed
[00:10:18.06]
within the atom as well as inside Europe.
[00:10:22.03]
While at the institute,
[00:10:24.01]
the physicists produced
a letter and an article
[00:10:27.01]
that would help change
the course of history.
[00:10:29.04]
The letter from Albert Einstein
[00:10:30.08]
and the Hungarian physicist
Leo Szilard was sent
[00:10:33.08]
to Franklin Roosevelt.
[00:10:35.02]
They warned the president of a new source
[00:10:37.02]
of incredible energy from
the splitting of an atom
[00:10:39.09]
that could well lead to the construction
[00:10:41.09]
of extremely powerful new bombs.
[00:10:45.07]
One month later, Niels Bohr
[00:10:47.07]
and the Princeton physicist
John Wheeler produced an article
[00:10:50.07]
on the mechanism of nuclear fission.
[00:10:52.08]
It was published September 1st,
[00:10:54.09]
the same day Germany invaded Poland
[00:10:57.03]
and the beginning of the Second World War.
[00:11:00.08]
A political chain reaction
followed: the Manhattan Project,
[00:11:04.09]
Los Alamos, and the dropping
of two atomic bombs on Japan.
[00:11:12.02]
Seven years later,
[00:11:13.04]
after the bomb helped
end the Second World War
[00:11:15.07]
and start a Cold War
with the Soviet Union,
[00:11:18.00]
Einstein voiced his regret
for the inability of humankind
[00:11:21.07]
to manage the powerful technology
[00:11:24.00]
he and other physicists
had brought to life.
[00:11:28.05]
[tense piano music]
[00:11:31.05]
Without quantum mechanics,
[00:11:32.08]
there would be no atomic
bomb or nuclear revolution,
[00:11:36.07]
microprocessor or information revolution.
[00:11:41.06]
In the first quantum revolution,
[00:11:43.04]
nuclear weapons helped end a World War
[00:11:46.04]
and dominate a bipolar order.
[00:11:49.01]
In the second revolution,
[00:11:50.03]
information technology
helped network societies,
[00:11:53.09]
hyper-globalize the economy,
[00:11:55.08]
and, sadly, Balkanize global politics.
[00:11:59.04]
Now a third revolution is stirring
[00:12:02.04]
in quantum computing, communication,
[00:12:04.07]
and artificial intelligence,
with the potential
[00:12:07.02]
to transform how wars are
waged and peace is made.
[00:12:11.06]
Instead of a letter or an article,
[00:12:13.05]
we decided to make a film.
[00:12:15.06]
The Solvay Conferences became the model
[00:12:17.07]
for international symposia
[00:12:19.01]
that we would hold annually at Q Station,
[00:12:21.04]
the former quarantine
site of Sydney Harbor.
[00:12:24.00]
We would travel to Copenhagen,
Singapore, Ann Arbor,
[00:12:28.02]
Silicon Valley, Shanghai, New Delhi,
[00:12:31.02]
and other key sites to track
the origins, evolution,
[00:12:34.07]
and potential convergence
of quantum science,
[00:12:37.05]
technology, and geopolitics.
[00:12:39.09]
All in search of answers
to questions raised
[00:12:42.04]
by a third quantum revolution.
[00:12:45.00]
When will it happen?
[00:12:47.01]
What will it mean?
[00:12:49.02]
Who will benefit?
[00:12:54.01]
- There were many of the scientists
[00:12:56.04]
who were involved in the Manhattan Project
[00:12:58.02]
who had second thoughts, in a
sense almost first thoughts.
[00:13:01.05]
The first thought Bohr had
[00:13:02.07]
when he heard about the program
[00:13:04.01]
was not really how to
do it scientifically.
[00:13:07.02]
It was to think about
the political effects
[00:13:08.07]
as the first reaction.
[00:13:10.01]
- Why did Werner
Heisenberg go to Copenhagen
[00:13:12.03]
in September of 1941 in
German-occupied Denmark
[00:13:16.08]
at the height of Germany's
expansion during World War II?
[00:13:19.02]
Why did he go and what did
he and Bohr talk about?
[00:13:23.01]
- People who actually started
quantum mechanics also had
[00:13:25.06]
a hard time understanding
it and explaining it,
[00:13:27.08]
and it is still considered one of the most
[00:13:30.00]
exotic fields of all of science.
[00:13:31.06]
- We can actually test it.
[00:13:33.01]
It's an invitation
[00:13:34.05]
to take a philosophical
question into the lab,
[00:13:37.00]
and how often do you get to
take philosophy into the lab?
[00:13:40.03]
- Measuring devices are big objects,
[00:13:42.07]
and big objects don't obey
the laws of quantum mechanics,
[00:13:46.04]
so they're something different.
[00:13:48.08]
With the advent of the hope of
building a quantum computer,
[00:13:53.08]
we start to realize that bigness
[00:13:55.06]
has nothing to do with that.
[00:13:58.00]
- We speak somehow about
the quantum revolution
[00:14:01.03]
as if it has not already started to occur.
[00:14:03.07]
The fact is, almost everything
around us is powered
[00:14:05.09]
by our mastery of the most basic phenomena
[00:14:09.05]
in quantum mechanics.
[00:14:10.05]
- There is still at least four
strong competing technologies
[00:14:17.02]
to see which one will
be the best technology
[00:14:19.04]
for quantum computing.
[00:14:20.07]
- A time is coming where
we're going to be making use
[00:14:23.04]
of those distinct and different
aspects of the quantum world
[00:14:27.07]
and using those different aspects
[00:14:29.06]
for revolutionary, disruptive things.
[00:14:33.00]
- As a scientist, fundamentally
the most rewarding thing is
[00:14:36.03]
can you control the quantum world?
[00:14:37.09]
So it's really understanding
nature, its fundamental level.
[00:14:40.06]
- What I love about
building a quantum computer
[00:14:44.02]
is all these concepts
become very natural for you.
[00:14:47.07]
- So as a result of
these Bell experiments,
[00:14:49.01]
we have to accept that
nature is not classical.
[00:14:52.03]
We have to accept that our
way of thinking about things
[00:14:55.04]
is actually to some extent wrong.
[00:14:57.02]
- I believe that life is
kind of uniquely poised
[00:15:01.06]
between the quantum and
the classical world.
[00:15:04.08]
- I believe this is an
important contribution
[00:15:10.05]
to the way we think about social sciences
[00:15:14.05]
because it opens maybe different ways
[00:15:17.08]
for looking at reality, how
we are actors in the world,
[00:15:21.04]
and how we may make a change in the world.
[00:15:25.08]
- Consciousness, and by
extension human subjectivity,
[00:15:29.01]
is a macroscopic
quantum-mechanical phenomenon.
[00:15:31.07]
We're basically walking wave functions.
[00:15:33.09]
- I think we're all quantum,
[00:15:35.02]
so in that sense, I would say,
[00:15:37.09]
[laughs] we could say that
we're quantum computers,
[00:15:40.06]
but I don't mean anything
particularly exciting by that, so.
[00:15:45.07]
- I think the best possible
uses of quantum computing
[00:15:48.07]
are going to be applications of
[00:15:51.02]
quantum artificial intelligence.
[00:15:52.09]
- Right, the dream of
control is the reason
[00:15:54.04]
why we want artificial intelligence.
[00:15:55.08]
And the problem there is
[00:15:56.06]
there is a philosophical problem there,
[00:15:58.05]
because if we equate
consciousness with intelligence,
[00:16:01.00]
then it's by definition beyond control.
[00:16:03.09]
So I think it's an impossible dream.
[00:16:06.00]
- I'm sure people will find a way
[00:16:08.07]
to use quantum computers in warfare.
[00:16:12.08]
There is no doubt about it.
[00:16:15.00]
- The more that we speed
up our conflicts as nations
[00:16:19.03]
using artificial intelligence,
[00:16:21.08]
the more we reduce our decision space.
[00:16:24.09]
- When you say quantum internet,
[00:16:26.02]
I just think this is a much
faster, more efficient way
[00:16:29.05]
to gather information
about people's habits.
[00:16:34.01]
- How you put the dial
of your society to say,
[00:16:37.09]
well, things may go wrong, but if they do,
[00:16:41.04]
then is that a problem for the collective
[00:16:44.00]
or is that a problem for the individual?
[00:16:46.03]
That is a profoundly ethical moment.
[00:16:48.08]
- If it is a race,
[00:16:49.06]
it might be a race that
all of humanity wins.
[00:16:51.04]
But also about the rise of China,
[00:16:53.05]
about how we've seen AI and
quantum in China really take off
[00:16:57.02]
for the last few years
[00:16:58.06]
and the challenges that
that poses to our security
[00:17:02.08]
and to our economies.
[00:17:04.02]
- When haven't we mobilized
every kind of human effort
[00:17:08.05]
to refine our techniques for
how to destroy ourselves?
[00:17:12.08]
- Instead of kind of
conceptualizing development
[00:17:16.09]
in this area as mirroring the space race
[00:17:20.07]
or the arms race during the Cold War,
[00:17:23.07]
but instead take this opportunity
[00:17:27.00]
to use science and
technology as a vehicle,
[00:17:30.00]
a driver for international cooperation.
[00:17:33.01]
- You know, the distance between we
[00:17:35.02]
and a god is a quantum computer.
[00:17:38.06]
- This is the ultimate mystery to solve.
[00:17:41.07]
You know, how the universe works.
[00:17:44.04]
- Bohr may have had his
own insight about this,
[00:17:48.02]
that one of the ways to unlock the meaning
[00:17:52.00]
of the quantum shift in
terms of humanity's story,
[00:17:55.05]
because the quantum shift is
fundamentally a story happening
[00:17:59.09]
on the human,
[00:18:02.05]
that the only way in
would be through poetry.
[00:18:09.03]
[dark ambient music]
[00:18:39.02]
[tense music continues]
[00:18:45.08]
- [James] Every new
religion, powerful idea,
[00:18:49.02]
or revolutionary moment
comes with an origin myth.
[00:18:52.05]
Quantum mechanics is no exception.
[00:18:54.07]
In many accounts, quantum
mechanics emerges full-grown
[00:18:57.08]
from the impressive minds
of the Nobel Laureates,
[00:19:00.01]
past and future, gathered at
the 1927 Solvay Conference
[00:19:03.05]
in Brussels.
[00:19:04.08]
This myth was propagated on
the third day of the conference
[00:19:08.00]
when Werner Heisenberg
and Max Born went so far
[00:19:11.01]
as to declare, "We
consider quantum mechanics
[00:19:14.01]
"to be a closed theory,
whose fundamental physical
[00:19:16.07]
"and mathematical assumptions
are no longer susceptible
[00:19:19.05]
"to any modification."
[00:19:22.05]
But the old guard of classical
physics was not about
[00:19:25.00]
to give up without a fight.
[00:19:26.06]
Louis de Broglie presented
particles riding pilot waves,
[00:19:30.09]
but his theory required an
elusive hidden variable.
[00:19:34.09]
Erwin Schrodinger posited waves
[00:19:36.05]
that could exist in
multidimensional spaces,
[00:19:39.03]
but only in the form of
abstract calculations.
[00:19:42.08]
And on the last day,
[00:19:45.01]
Albert Einstein mounted
a pitched final defense,
[00:19:47.09]
a proliferation of double-slit
thought experiments intended
[00:19:50.09]
to reveal the incompleteness
of quantum mechanics.
[00:19:54.04]
But Einstein's baroque apparatus fell
[00:19:57.00]
under the hammer blows of Bohr's critique
[00:20:00.01]
and the inescapability of
the uncertainty principle.
[00:20:03.07]
What ultimately separated
[00:20:05.00]
the so-called quantum instrumentalist
[00:20:07.05]
from the old school realist was the idea,
[00:20:10.08]
eventually backed by experimental proofs,
[00:20:13.01]
that more than one truth could
be true at the same time.
[00:20:16.05]
In particular,
[00:20:17.06]
that light could be both
a wave and a particle
[00:20:20.05]
up until the moment of
observation or measurement.
[00:20:23.03]
No one promoted this paradox
more doggedly than Bohr.
[00:20:27.02]
[ethereal ambient music]
[00:20:35.02]
And no principle captured
this radical new picture
[00:20:38.02]
of reality better than Bohr's
concept of complementarity,
[00:20:41.06]
in which mutually exclusive descriptions
[00:20:43.09]
of particular phenomena,
[00:20:45.05]
like light as a wave and particle,
[00:20:47.04]
would be considered as complementary
[00:20:49.05]
rather than contradictory.
[00:20:52.03]
Introduced earlier at the
International Physics Conference
[00:20:55.02]
as the quantum postulate,
[00:20:57.09]
complementarity would
become a founding principle
[00:21:00.07]
of the so-called
Copenhagen Interpretation.
[00:21:04.00]
Yet, complementarity rarely
rates more than a footnote
[00:21:07.03]
in contemporary stories
of quantum mechanics.
[00:21:10.02]
To better understand why,
we went to Copenhagen
[00:21:13.00]
and the Niels Bohr Institute.
[00:21:15.06]
But first, we made a virtual
stop for a high-level briefing
[00:21:18.09]
from Project Q researcher Nick Harrington,
[00:21:21.08]
to see how Bohr's concept
of complementarity,
[00:21:24.06]
along with superposition, uncertainty,
[00:21:27.00]
and other quantum principles,
[00:21:28.05]
had implications far beyond
the small world of atoms
[00:21:32.03]
and into the interactions
of people, states,
[00:21:34.09]
and complex systems.
[00:21:40.06]
- Despite receiving
the Nobel Prize in 1922
[00:21:43.08]
for his services in the investigation
[00:21:45.09]
of the structure of atoms
[00:21:47.05]
and of the radiation emanating from them,
[00:21:50.01]
Niels Bohr considered his
theory of complementarity
[00:21:53.06]
his most important contribution.
[00:21:56.01]
Bohr's theory of complementarity
was the basis for his view
[00:22:00.03]
that quantum was a complete theory.
[00:22:03.04]
In many ways, complementarity connected
[00:22:06.04]
all the major quantum concepts together
[00:22:08.07]
under one unified framework.
[00:22:11.05]
Superposition, for example,
describes the quantum state
[00:22:15.01]
prior to the need for complementarity.
[00:22:17.07]
It is only after the
wave function collapses,
[00:22:20.06]
once the quantum state has transitioned
[00:22:22.07]
from superposition to a determined state,
[00:22:25.04]
that complementarity becomes necessary.
[00:22:29.04]
This is because it is the
collapse of the wave function,
[00:22:32.04]
what happens as a result
of human observation
[00:22:34.06]
and measurement, that generates situations
[00:22:37.08]
where mutually exclusive descriptions
[00:22:40.02]
of the same phenomenon arise.
[00:22:43.01]
Through the act of measurement,
[00:22:44.09]
the human observer disturbs
the quantum system,
[00:22:47.08]
introducing what Heisenberg
referred to as uncertainty,
[00:22:51.02]
determining one possible set of values
[00:22:53.09]
according to those permitted
by the wave function,
[00:22:57.06]
at the expense of all other potentials.
[00:23:00.09]
Therefore, the theory of
complementarity can be understood
[00:23:05.00]
as a necessary condition
[00:23:07.01]
for a complete account of quantum theory
[00:23:09.06]
due to the uncertainty introduced
into the quantum system
[00:23:12.09]
by the human observer, what
is generally referred to
[00:23:16.03]
as the measurement problem.
[00:23:18.08]
[ethereal ambient music]
[00:23:21.09]
- We're surrounded by measuring devices.
[00:23:24.03]
Our phones measure the signals.
[00:23:27.04]
The MRI machines measure
the electromagnetic fields
[00:23:32.07]
that we produce in order to
make medical diagnostics.
[00:23:37.05]
We have antennas looking at the sky
[00:23:41.01]
in order to learn about the
universe surrounding us.
[00:23:46.01]
Everything is about measurement.
[00:23:48.00]
And now, 100 years ago,
[00:23:51.07]
quantum mechanics and the
founding fathers told us
[00:23:55.04]
that it is not possible
to measure everything
[00:23:59.01]
with arbitrary accuracy.
[00:24:01.01]
There are quantum uncertainties.
[00:24:04.01]
And Niels Bohr was one
of the big names in that,
[00:24:10.09]
and he found the
complementarity principle,
[00:24:16.06]
which says that the object can behave
[00:24:20.09]
as a particle and as a wave.
[00:24:22.04]
So either you know where it is,
[00:24:24.03]
or you know what speed it has.
[00:24:27.00]
- We had this complimentary
view of things, you know,
[00:24:31.07]
things might have both
good and bad implications,
[00:24:35.01]
and he would work for
the good implications.
[00:24:37.05]
Bohr's subsequent work during
and after the Second World War
[00:24:41.07]
to develop an open world,
[00:24:43.03]
he had conversations with Churchill,
[00:24:45.06]
he had conversations with Roosevelt
[00:24:48.09]
to try to convince them to tell Stalin
[00:24:52.09]
that there was an atomic bomb on the way,
[00:24:57.07]
because otherwise he thought
there would be a terrible race,
[00:25:02.07]
you know, after the war,
[00:25:04.04]
which he wasn't wrong about, of course.
[00:25:07.05]
- The idea that quantum should
be able to accelerate AI
[00:25:10.09]
or quantum should be able to
accelerate machine learning is
[00:25:16.00]
the idea of why shouldn't it be able to?
[00:25:19.02]
I don't think human
capabilities is the goal.
[00:25:22.01]
I think something way beyond
human capabilities is the goal.
[00:25:26.04]
And you know, what we
are endeavoring to invent
[00:25:32.01]
isn't just an emulator of human thought.
[00:25:34.08]
I think that that's a small goal.
[00:25:36.09]
I mean, we just evolved to,
you know, to eat and reproduce.
[00:25:40.02]
We're, you know, we're not any
kind of endpoint of anything.
[00:25:43.02]
Now, some people would be
very scared by that idea.
[00:25:45.08]
Some people would be scared
by having something here
[00:25:48.03]
on Earth smarter than us, okay?
[00:25:50.08]
And they would say, "I
don't want anything.
[00:25:52.06]
"I don't want anything
around smarter than us."
[00:25:54.06]
Well, I don't feel that way.
[00:25:57.04]
- [Interviewer] What do you do here?
[00:25:58.09]
- I'm the philosopher of this place here.
[00:26:02.08]
He said, "Believe of this and this,
[00:26:04.04]
"and they can take this
advantage of your position."
[00:26:07.02]
And I don't think that Bohr likes that.
[00:26:10.01]
He said that,
[00:26:11.00]
"I am not dealing with
the reality of the world.
[00:26:14.03]
"I am dealing with pictures
of the real world,"
[00:26:18.00]
and that's exactly the point.
[00:26:19.04]
And that's why when we are
talking about the complementarity
[00:26:22.02]
of the concept of truth.
[00:26:25.05]
[dark ambient music]
[00:26:46.04]
[ethereal ambient music]
[00:26:55.05]
- [James] A particle that
behaves as if it can be
[00:26:57.07]
in two places at once.
[00:27:00.06]
The qubits that spin up,
[00:27:01.06]
spin down at the same time.
[00:27:04.06]
A cat that is both dead and alive
[00:27:06.08]
until we look inside the box.
[00:27:08.07]
All are in quantum
states of superposition.
[00:27:12.07]
Long before the word entered the lexicon
[00:27:14.08]
of quantum mechanics,
[00:27:15.09]
superposition made its first appearance
[00:27:17.07]
in the works of Thomas Hobbes.
[00:27:20.03]
Hobbes was better known
[00:27:21.06]
for his political
masterpiece, "Leviathan."
[00:27:24.05]
He was also known as a founding father,
[00:27:26.02]
along with Machiavelli,
[00:27:28.01]
of the so-called Realist
school of geopolitics,
[00:27:30.04]
in which sovereign states
bounce off each other
[00:27:32.09]
like billiard balls in a
perpetual struggle for power
[00:27:36.01]
under conditions of international anarchy.
[00:27:39.01]
Hobbes also styled
himself a mathematician,
[00:27:41.07]
and in 1656 he set out in
[00:27:44.04]
"Six Lessons to the
Professors of Mathematics"
[00:27:47.01]
to prove that the circle could be squared.
[00:27:50.03]
It was also in this essay
[00:27:51.01]
that Hobbes coined the
new term "superposition"
[00:27:53.07]
to describe, in his words,
the action or practice
[00:27:57.00]
of notionally moving one figure
[00:27:58.08]
into the position occupied by another
[00:28:01.01]
so as to show that they are congruent.
[00:28:03.09]
His proof was quickly shot
down by his arch-nemesis,
[00:28:06.08]
John Wallis, professor
of geometry at Oxford,
[00:28:09.05]
and not coincidentally
the chief cryptographer
[00:28:12.07]
to the royal court.
[00:28:13.05]
Like his mathematical proofs,
[00:28:15.03]
Hobbes' new term did not
catch on at the time.
[00:28:18.01]
Nevertheless, superposition
would become one
[00:28:20.02]
of the most important,
[00:28:21.04]
if not strangest concepts
in quantum mechanics.
[00:28:24.08]
And, along with its twin
concept entanglement,
[00:28:27.06]
it is now central to the effort
[00:28:29.02]
to build a quantum computer
based on superposition qubits.
[00:28:34.04]
To better understand the
revolutionary potential
[00:28:36.04]
of superposition, we
traveled to Singapore,
[00:28:40.01]
where 300 scientists and students gathered
[00:28:42.04]
at the first international conference
[00:28:44.02]
on quantum communication,
measurement, and computing.
[00:28:48.00]
We first met with Parag Khanna,
[00:28:49.09]
a geo-strategic expert
living in Singapore,
[00:28:52.07]
who highlighted the superpositioned
and complimentary nature
[00:28:55.08]
of the city-state from
its very beginnings,
[00:28:58.01]
as first captured in a 1819 letter
[00:29:00.06]
by its colonial founder, Thomas Raffles.
[00:29:05.01]
- He famously said, "Our
aim is trade not territory."
[00:29:09.08]
And it's obviously words that
Singapore has come to live by.
[00:29:13.09]
Asia is still the world's factory floor
[00:29:16.00]
from that traditional 19th
century production standpoint,
[00:29:18.07]
but also they're making the
fastest and largest investments
[00:29:23.00]
in the newer technologies
of connectivities.
[00:29:25.05]
The broader trend that also
reinforces this is just trying
[00:29:28.09]
to move away from western dependence
[00:29:30.04]
in the area of public goods
in general, which is to say
[00:29:33.09]
western provision of security guarantees.
[00:29:36.02]
So even though many of China's
neighbors, for example,
[00:29:39.03]
are fearful of China's
hegemonic ambitions,
[00:29:42.03]
at the same time,
[00:29:43.06]
they don't want to have
an outside hegemon either.
[00:29:46.05]
So there is what I call an
Asia for Asians movement.
[00:29:50.01]
Clearly the quantum turn is more
[00:29:52.02]
like a quantum incorporation
of the newest methodologies
[00:29:56.03]
and technologies into
this research apparatus
[00:29:59.01]
that is fairly robust
across these governments.
[00:30:01.02]
So, they're angling to do
very well in this race.
[00:30:07.01]
- Physics at the end of the century,
[00:30:09.00]
we thought we had it all figured out.
[00:30:10.05]
There's just one or two little things
[00:30:12.02]
that still need to be cleaned up.
[00:30:13.07]
And then,
[00:30:16.07]
that turned out not to be the case.
[00:30:18.00]
There was the ultraviolet catastrophe.
[00:30:20.02]
We suddenly had nuclear physics,
[00:30:22.09]
and all of the physics that was developed
[00:30:25.02]
during the 20th century
[00:30:26.02]
no one could have dreamed about before,
[00:30:27.08]
just because the
understanding was you have,
[00:30:32.03]
you think you're 99% of the way there,
[00:30:34.03]
and then when you get
into that 1%, you find,
[00:30:36.06]
oh, it's much bigger
than you thought before.
[00:30:38.07]
And I would not at all be
surprised if that happens again.
[00:30:42.03]
I mean, we've been using quantum mechanics
[00:30:43.05]
quite successfully for about 100 years.
[00:30:45.09]
So it's high time we start solving some
[00:30:50.06]
of those last little things
[00:30:52.01]
that we're still concerned about.
[00:30:53.05]
- If you were gonna look at a race,
[00:30:54.07]
it's the most clearly there's a race
[00:30:56.04]
between what should we build
a quantum computer out of.
[00:31:00.08]
Out of ions, so individual atoms.
[00:31:03.00]
Out of superconducting devices,
[00:31:04.05]
or out of semiconductor devices.
[00:31:06.07]
And at the moment, it's pretty clear
[00:31:08.03]
that superconducting
devices are in the lead.
[00:31:11.00]
If you count by, for example,
[00:31:13.01]
how many logical elements
can they control?
[00:31:17.01]
And their progress in recent years
[00:31:19.08]
has been really impressive.
[00:31:21.06]
Ernest Rutherford is very
important in this whole story
[00:31:24.05]
of how we came to
understand quantum physics
[00:31:26.08]
and the structure of the atom.
[00:31:28.06]
- [Interviewer] But
you're just saying that
[00:31:29.08]
because you're a Kiwi.
[00:31:30.07]
- No, I'm not just saying that
'cause I'm a Kiwi. [laughs]
[00:31:33.08]
That's actually true. [laughs]
[00:31:40.01]
- Can you control the quantum world?
[00:31:41.07]
So it's really understanding
nature, its fundamental level,
[00:31:44.04]
and can we actually
control the quantum states?
[00:31:46.04]
If we can, then, you know,
it has all these predictions
[00:31:48.08]
of, you know, parallel computing power
[00:31:51.00]
and, you know, secure communication,
[00:31:52.09]
both of which are highly valuable.
[00:31:55.00]
But I guess that every
individual is gonna have
[00:31:56.05]
which killer app they
think is the most relevant.
[00:31:59.05]
As a scientist, for me,
it's actually building
[00:32:01.06]
the quantum computer itself
[00:32:02.05]
and using it to help design itself
[00:32:04.02]
is probably the one that
I'm most excited by.
[00:32:06.08]
In Australia, one of the things
I've been very keen about is
[00:32:09.03]
that we constantly interact
with defense and with government
[00:32:12.02]
and we update them, you
know, really regularly
[00:32:14.06]
about how the technology's evolving,
[00:32:16.00]
where it's likely to go.
[00:32:18.07]
- I'm sure people will find a way
[00:32:22.01]
to use quantum computers in warfare.
[00:32:25.07]
There is no doubt about it.
[00:32:29.04]
So, but you know, the
nuclear weapon, right?
[00:32:34.00]
It's a horrible thing to have.
[00:32:36.09]
But as 70 years of history show,
[00:32:40.07]
it would be a horrible thing to not have.
[00:32:44.05]
- If you look at the kinds of
systems we're developing today
[00:32:48.05]
that can do machine
learning, we see potential
[00:32:51.04]
for accelerating those
fundamental learning algorithms
[00:32:54.02]
by using quantum techniques,
by significant factors.
[00:32:57.06]
So, we think ultimately
this is really gonna be
[00:33:00.01]
far more significant for humanity
[00:33:03.06]
than applications of quantum computing
[00:33:05.05]
into things like code breaking,
[00:33:07.02]
which traditionally has
sort of most people think is
[00:33:09.07]
the killer app today, but
we don't really think that.
[00:33:13.02]
- Our encryption standards
will have to change.
[00:33:15.09]
Whether this becomes
quantum key distribution
[00:33:18.02]
or post-quantum crypto, no
one knows, but what we know,
[00:33:21.05]
what we have now has to
change for the future.
[00:33:24.01]
There's been a few examples recently
[00:33:26.07]
where people have started looking
[00:33:28.00]
at these post-quantum crypto schemes,
[00:33:30.06]
one out of GCHQ in the UK,
[00:33:34.05]
who are the NSA equivalents in a sense.
[00:33:38.03]
There's a crypto system
that they called Soliloquy,
[00:33:42.05]
which they spent a few years developing,
[00:33:43.09]
which is a post-quantum crypto scheme.
[00:33:46.02]
It seemed to work nicely.
[00:33:47.04]
Then they looked at trying
to do a quantum attack on it
[00:33:50.04]
and it broke. [laughs]
[00:33:52.05]
- The question is,
[00:33:53.03]
what did I think about
the movie "Ant-Man"?
[00:33:54.09]
And I was very happy to be asked that
[00:33:57.03]
because I had a realization
[00:33:59.03]
that I understand now how he
actually manages to shrink.
[00:34:02.08]
And the issue is that, of course,
we're all made up of atoms
[00:34:06.05]
and the atoms have a nuclei
[00:34:07.05]
and they're surrounded by electrons.
[00:34:09.05]
If you can convert the
electrons instead into muons,
[00:34:13.00]
muons are basically heavy electrons,
[00:34:15.00]
they're 200 times heavier than electrons,
[00:34:17.06]
it turns out that the
radius of the atoms shrinks
[00:34:19.06]
by one over that mass.
[00:34:20.07]
So they go down by a factor of 200.
[00:34:23.01]
And at the very end,
[00:34:24.03]
he shrinks down more to the quantum realm.
[00:34:26.00]
So if you go from muons to tau particles,
[00:34:28.02]
which are yet even heavier electrons,
[00:34:30.00]
then you become even much
more, much more small.
[00:34:32.07]
- Do you guys just put the word "quantum"
[00:34:33.09]
in front of everything?
[00:34:35.07]
- If the question is,
[00:34:36.06]
when will we see a quantum
computer in real action?
[00:34:39.06]
The answer to that question
has always been "in 15 years,"
[00:34:43.01]
and I think it is still in 15 years.
[00:34:45.01]
And, well, ask me in 10, 15 years,
[00:34:47.02]
and I'll probably give
you the same answer again.
[00:34:51.01]
[dark ambient music]
[00:35:27.04]
- [James] In the late spring
of 1925, Werner Heisenberg,
[00:35:30.00]
desperately seeking relief
from his pollen allergies,
[00:35:32.09]
escapes to the wind swept
island of Heligoland
[00:35:35.04]
in the North Sea.
[00:35:36.08]
In one evening and into the early morning,
[00:35:39.05]
he works out the mathematical
structures, matrix algebra,
[00:35:43.03]
to prove that atoms are not
miniature solar systems,
[00:35:46.06]
but a cloud of probabilities
until measured.
[00:35:49.06]
As he would later put it,
[00:35:51.01]
the idea of uncertainty
"simply presented itself."
[00:36:02.04]
[rhythmic metallic scraping]
[00:36:15.07]
[ominous ambient drones]
[00:36:20.06]
- Technologically, there's a lot of buzz
[00:36:22.08]
around AI and cyber.
[00:36:24.09]
And among the AI and cyber experts I know,
[00:36:27.06]
there seems to be a lack of appreciation
[00:36:30.02]
for the inextricable link to quantum.
[00:36:33.00]
- Public anxiety about quantum is nil.
[00:36:36.01]
People do not report any kind of concern.
[00:36:38.01]
And that is in contrast to
things like synthetic biology,
[00:36:40.06]
artificial intelligence, et cetera.
[00:36:43.00]
- One current concept of
concern for me is the idea
[00:36:46.03]
of technological hype or
extravagant expectations about
[00:36:50.06]
new and emerging technologies
[00:36:52.05]
in the context of the future.
[00:36:54.06]
- The main conclusion
is that the investment
[00:36:57.02]
that is being devoted to
investigating technologies
[00:37:01.02]
that have to do with
with quantum computing
[00:37:03.08]
is generating a tremendous amount
[00:37:05.04]
of fundamental breakthroughs
and fundamental discoveries.
[00:37:08.05]
And that furthers our
understanding of the universe.
[00:37:11.01]
- So right now, now we're
getting to a place where we,
[00:37:13.08]
probably the solution is gonna
be some hybridized scheme.
[00:37:17.01]
I mentioned photons and ions,
[00:37:18.00]
and these aren't all the approaches.
[00:37:19.06]
We've got topological schemes in Microsoft
[00:37:22.03]
and we have superconnecting schemes,
[00:37:25.02]
that's what Google and IBM are doing.
[00:37:26.06]
They're gonna run into
their problems, too.
[00:37:28.08]
- Whether having the big
companies like Google, IBM,
[00:37:33.02]
and Microsoft involved with
building quantum computers,
[00:37:37.06]
how this affects academia,
and does it stifle things,
[00:37:41.07]
does it make it too hard to
compete, or does it help?
[00:37:45.04]
And questions about
non-disclosure agreements,
[00:37:48.05]
does this stifle scientific inquiry?
[00:37:51.05]
- Now this is actually a fun run,
[00:37:54.02]
not a nationalistic race,
[00:37:59.02]
Americans versus the Chinese
[00:38:00.08]
or whatever state player you want,
[00:38:02.07]
secret organizations versus
other secret organizations.
[00:38:05.08]
But this is university
researchers leading the field
[00:38:09.09]
across the world, working together.
[00:38:12.03]
- At some point, somebody is gonna think
[00:38:14.02]
there's a tipping point,
[00:38:15.05]
in which case it looks
like the race can be won
[00:38:18.09]
and then it won't be a fun run anymore.
[00:38:20.08]
It will be all about who
is actually gonna get
[00:38:23.05]
to that tipping point first.
[00:38:25.01]
- I'm afraid that we have
missed the opportunity
[00:38:27.07]
to pursue something truly
international in the scale
[00:38:31.02]
that will allow us to put
resource together in, let's say,
[00:38:34.06]
developing a general-purpose
quantum computer.
[00:38:38.01]
- Well, there's some very
exciting work in China
[00:38:39.07]
in quantum technology, quantum
communications in particular,
[00:38:42.07]
led by the group of
Professor Jian-Wei Pan,
[00:38:45.03]
very well funded by
the Chinese government.
[00:38:47.04]
But one of their really
noteworthy achievements was
[00:38:50.04]
the quantum satellite.
[00:38:51.02]
So they put a satellite in low-Earth orbit
[00:38:54.00]
with a quantum light source, a laser,
[00:38:56.02]
a generation of entanglement, photons,
[00:38:58.05]
and they demonstrated
a quantum secure leak.
[00:39:01.02]
- Yeah, I'm always
concerned about the ill uses
[00:39:04.00]
and the abuses of these
type of technologies,
[00:39:06.09]
considering that there
is massive investment
[00:39:09.04]
in China going on with respect to this,
[00:39:12.02]
in light of surveillance
capitalism and the way
[00:39:15.06]
in which what are now already
very powerful algorithms
[00:39:19.02]
and computing processing systems,
[00:39:21.03]
let alone quantum, leave that out,
[00:39:23.01]
just look at what exists today.
[00:39:25.04]
These are being used
principally to shape people,
[00:39:28.05]
shape their conversations,
[00:39:30.00]
monitor everything they do
in ways that are having,
[00:39:33.06]
I believe, wide-scale detrimental effects
[00:39:36.03]
on society and politics.
[00:39:38.06]
- The possibility that we are going
[00:39:40.09]
to deploy some of these weapons
[00:39:42.08]
without understanding the escalation risk.
[00:39:46.09]
You know, we stopped
short of responding to,
[00:39:50.03]
the United States,
[00:39:51.02]
of responding to the election hack in 2016
[00:39:56.01]
because President Obama, rightly so,
[00:39:58.01]
was worried that if we did something,
[00:39:59.09]
the Russians could come back
[00:40:01.02]
into the actual election machines.
[00:40:05.00]
So, it proves that you can have
[00:40:08.05]
the world's greatest
offensive cyber machine
[00:40:12.02]
and you won't use it
[00:40:14.00]
if you've got the most vulnerable society.
[00:40:17.02]
And we will have the
most vulnerable society
[00:40:19.03]
for a long, long time.
[00:40:21.02]
- And we have the dilemma
with quantum that,
[00:40:23.04]
and with maybe also
artificial intelligence,
[00:40:25.08]
some of the related issues,
[00:40:27.00]
that the danger at the collective level
[00:40:29.08]
of this going horribly wrong
probably has to be securitized,
[00:40:33.09]
but at the same time you risk feeding
[00:40:36.03]
into the most destructive version
of the state-against-state
[00:40:40.00]
or company-against-company competition
[00:40:42.02]
where it can get very destructive.
[00:40:43.08]
- I also think that quantum
is an aspirational solution
[00:40:47.03]
for a problem we already have, right?
[00:40:49.06]
So we have, you know, pick your poison,
[00:40:51.08]
you can call it hybrid warfare,
[00:40:53.01]
you can call it multi-domain warfare.
[00:40:55.00]
I call it transversal warfare.
[00:40:57.05]
But you never know where you're fighting
[00:40:59.00]
when you're fighting in the
contemporary battlefield.
[00:41:00.09]
It's cyber, it's civilian,
it's improvised weapons,
[00:41:04.09]
it's heavy platform weapons,
[00:41:06.03]
and I think everyone hopes
that somehow quantum will mean
[00:41:10.02]
that we have control again, right?
[00:41:11.06]
So even the United States feels
a profound loss of control,
[00:41:16.06]
and I think part of the
mutual cycle of fear is
[00:41:19.08]
whoever gets control on chaos first
[00:41:22.02]
gets to wield it as a weapon.
[00:41:24.02]
- Uncertainty has always been
the one that stands out for me
[00:41:28.04]
because nothing is certain,
[00:41:30.04]
and living with that
uncertainty is not just a matter
[00:41:33.08]
of mathematical calculation,
it's a metaphysical problem.
[00:41:38.04]
- There's a possibility
[00:41:39.05]
that we're losing an opportunity
to become more humble
[00:41:42.09]
or to really embrace an uncertain
or non-determinist world
[00:41:47.03]
or, much more likely, I think,
and much more interestingly,
[00:41:51.01]
we might be missing an opportunity
[00:41:53.00]
to use the cosmological
implications of quantum mechanics
[00:41:57.01]
to actually invert or subvert
[00:42:00.03]
or completely break apart the
social-theoretic foundations
[00:42:03.03]
of our understanding of
what it means to be a human
[00:42:05.05]
and what a social system looks like.
[00:42:08.02]
- One of the things that we
don't have in machines yet
[00:42:11.04]
and will possibly hold us back
[00:42:13.01]
from ever having artificial
superintelligence
[00:42:15.08]
is any sort of consciousness.
[00:42:17.01]
And yet the problem is we
have no idea what that is
[00:42:19.05]
and how to program it when
we don't know what it is.
[00:42:22.09]
Again, that's where quantum may come in,
[00:42:24.04]
because there may be some, you know,
[00:42:26.02]
there may be some quantum
weirdness going on in our brains
[00:42:29.07]
that is responsible for our consciousness.
[00:42:32.02]
Or alternatively,
[00:42:33.04]
it may be something that
is actually just imagined.
[00:42:35.06]
Our brains are very good
at imagining things.
[00:42:40.08]
[birds chirping]
[00:42:47.00]
[dark ambient music]
[00:43:09.02]
[tranquil ambient music]
[00:43:38.06]
[audience applauds]
[00:43:41.07]
- Hello, I am Alex Wendt,
[00:43:43.07]
and I am a walking, talking
quantum wave function.
[00:43:46.09]
And guess what?
[00:43:48.02]
So are you.
[00:43:50.03]
I know this might sound
weird, which is okay
[00:43:53.01]
because quantum theory is weird,
[00:43:54.05]
but it's about to get weirder.
[00:43:56.05]
[swirling high-pitched tone]
[00:43:58.01]
Before we go there, what do
we know about quantum so far?
[00:44:02.01]
We know that energy comes
in discontinuous packets
[00:44:04.07]
of waves and particles called quanta.
[00:44:07.08]
We know that this wave particle
duality makes it impossible
[00:44:10.08]
to measure position and
momentum simultaneously
[00:44:13.07]
without changing both,
[00:44:15.03]
giving rise to the uncertainty principle.
[00:44:18.00]
In the quantum world,
objects cannot be said
[00:44:20.02]
to really exist prior to observation.
[00:44:25.07]
We know that subatomic
particles can become
[00:44:27.09]
inextricably linked and
in a sense communicate
[00:44:31.05]
without any apparent causal connection,
[00:44:33.08]
exhibiting what Einstein
dismissively called
[00:44:36.08]
"spooky action at a
distance" or entanglement.
[00:44:41.02]
And we know that quantum computing,
[00:44:43.05]
which is based on the
superposition of qubits
[00:44:46.02]
rather than the on/off
microcircuitry of digital bits,
[00:44:50.03]
is about to go operational,
[00:44:52.02]
which will be a real game changer.
[00:44:54.07]
One after the other,
through mathematical models,
[00:44:57.04]
laboratory experiments
and cosmic observations,
[00:45:00.05]
the quantum theories, principles
[00:45:02.01]
and effects have proven right.
[00:45:06.03]
I have a new proposition.
[00:45:08.00]
What if quantum effects reach
beyond the microscopic world
[00:45:11.02]
of particles and waves
[00:45:13.02]
and into the macroscopic
world of big objects
[00:45:16.02]
like our bodies and brains,
[00:45:18.04]
and in particular into the
realm of consciousness itself?
[00:45:23.07]
What if all our desires,
beliefs, and feelings,
[00:45:27.08]
meaning consciousness
and all its intentions,
[00:45:30.06]
are actually macroscopic
quantum mechanical phenomenon?
[00:45:34.05]
Human beings would be, not
metaphorically or analogically,
[00:45:38.05]
but actually be walking wave functions.
[00:45:42.01]
And since the rules, norms
[00:45:43.05]
and institutions that govern
our lives are also rooted
[00:45:46.07]
in our minds, this would mean
that not just my intentions,
[00:45:51.01]
but yours as well, and indeed
all of our shared intentions
[00:45:54.09]
including those of societies,
would be quantum systems too.
[00:46:00.06]
Mind blowing, yes?
[00:46:04.03]
Well, many scientists,
[00:46:06.00]
and not just classically
minded ones, might say no.
[00:46:09.04]
They would say that whatever
quantum weirdness is going on
[00:46:12.04]
at the subatomic level quickly washes out
[00:46:15.09]
at the macroscopic level.
[00:46:17.05]
This is a process known as decoherence.
[00:46:21.07]
Anything big, wet, warm and squishy
[00:46:24.01]
like the brain cannot on
this view possibly have
[00:46:27.06]
quantum properties.
[00:46:29.07]
There's only one problem with this claim.
[00:46:32.01]
No one really knows how the brain,
[00:46:34.00]
let alone consciousness, really works.
[00:46:37.01]
Dig into the science
and history of the mind
[00:46:41.01]
and one finds layers of metaphors
[00:46:43.01]
and technologies littering
the road to progress.
[00:46:47.08]
In the Middle Ages,
[00:46:48.08]
the mind and body were
composed of wet and dry,
[00:46:51.08]
warm and cold humors
whose flow is controlled
[00:46:54.09]
by sin and the stars, prayer and penance.
[00:47:00.00]
In the Age of Reason, the
body took on a Newtonian look,
[00:47:04.02]
all levers and pulleys
[00:47:05.05]
with a brain that ticked
away like fine clockwork
[00:47:09.00]
except when broken.
[00:47:12.06]
Come the telegraph and the telephone,
[00:47:14.07]
the corporeal and the mental
were all tied together
[00:47:17.07]
like wires and plugs on
an operator's switchboard.
[00:47:20.08]
- [Operator] We're sorry,
you have reached a number
[00:47:21.09]
that has been disconnected.
[00:47:23.02]
- With the transistor,
microprocessor, and networks,
[00:47:26.09]
the brain became a computer
[00:47:28.08]
and the mind a protoplasmic
version of the internet.
[00:47:33.00]
However, the mind-body problem persists,
[00:47:35.07]
and it's not likely to be solved
[00:47:37.03]
by gods, Houston, or Google.
[00:47:42.00]
Maybe we have been
looking in the wrong place
[00:47:43.09]
for the solution to the problem.
[00:47:46.06]
Let's start with the wet stuff, the brain.
[00:47:49.05]
Quantum brain theory holds
that the brain is capable
[00:47:52.00]
of sustaining macroscopic
quantum coherence.
[00:47:56.07]
So we are not only walking wave functions,
[00:47:59.03]
we are walking quantum computers.
[00:48:02.03]
This by itself does not
solve the mind-body problem
[00:48:05.03]
because it doesn't tell us
[00:48:06.04]
why those quantum computers
would be conscious.
[00:48:09.09]
But if true, it would allow us to project
[00:48:12.02]
all the quantum weirdness
going on at the subatomic level
[00:48:15.07]
up to the whole brain.
[00:48:18.07]
That in turn motivates the
second part of the theory,
[00:48:21.04]
which proposes that consciousness
is not just a property
[00:48:24.01]
of human beings or other
complex forms of matter,
[00:48:27.09]
but goes all the way down
[00:48:32.01]
to the structure of matter itself.
[00:48:34.03]
In short,
[00:48:35.03]
matter at the subatomic level
is intrinsically minded.
[00:48:40.08]
Perhaps consciousness is not
a classical phenomenon at all,
[00:48:44.07]
but a quantum one.
[00:48:49.04]
Whether this theory will
gain broad acceptance
[00:48:51.08]
remains to be seen, and in my view,
[00:48:54.05]
to follow the dictum of many physicists,
[00:48:56.09]
it is just too elegant not to be true.
[00:49:01.09]
So am I, are we, quantum
walking wave functions?
[00:49:06.06]
[tranquil piano and ambient music]
[00:49:10.07]
[curtain rattling]
[00:49:22.03]
- Sometimes, we just don't
know a big thing happening
[00:49:26.06]
and we are sleeping next to it, right?
[00:49:29.07]
Now, we know we are in a big thing.
[00:49:32.07]
This is the thing that we are doing now,
[00:49:34.08]
the theme of the conference,
[00:49:36.08]
trustworthy quantum information.
[00:49:39.09]
I'm hopeful that the conference can become
[00:49:43.00]
the Solvay Conference of
Trustworthy Quantum Information.
[00:49:46.06]
- If something is, it's important
to you it's a secret today
[00:49:50.01]
and you wish it to remain
secret for a year or two,
[00:49:52.02]
like a credit card number,
there's no consequence.
[00:49:55.04]
Just continue as you do today.
[00:49:58.03]
But whenever you're encrypting something
[00:50:00.03]
for which you wish it to
remain secret in 20 years,
[00:50:05.06]
you're taking big risks.
[00:50:07.01]
- The way that the
cryptography system works,
[00:50:09.09]
it's called RSA, is based on
multiplying two prime numbers.
[00:50:15.05]
So basically you take two large numbers,
[00:50:17.04]
you multiply them together,
[00:50:19.04]
and you have to keep
secret the prime numbers.
[00:50:22.03]
Now what Shor's Algorithm is
[00:50:23.06]
is a way for a quantum computer basically
[00:50:27.00]
to do this factoring in
a much faster timescale.
[00:50:31.07]
- If you think about using
public-key cryptography, right,
[00:50:35.02]
then in our future
computational power grows
[00:50:38.09]
and at some point you
will be able eventually
[00:50:41.07]
to crack these codes.
[00:50:43.05]
You can just record it,
[00:50:44.09]
and somewhere in the
future, you can crack it.
[00:50:46.08]
Not if you use quantum key distribution.
[00:50:49.00]
The key is basically
independent of future progress,
[00:50:52.06]
and that is the very essential part.
[00:50:55.04]
- You don't really want
[00:50:57.03]
even your own security
agencies being able to
[00:51:02.03]
break all the communications
of your citizenship, right?
[00:51:08.04]
That's not good for society probably, so.
[00:51:13.07]
[dark ambient music]
[00:51:47.07]
[shambolic rock music]
[00:51:49.04]
- [James] In an exchange of
letters over the summer of 1935,
[00:51:52.06]
Albert Einstein and Erwin
Schrodinger constructed
[00:51:55.00]
what they called "an infernal experiment."
[00:51:58.02]
"The Gedankenexperiment:
A Paradox in a Box,"
[00:52:01.06]
became the first mockumentary
of quantum mechanics.
[00:52:08.07]
[rock music continues]
[00:52:17.08]
- [Schrodinger] Guten Tag.
[00:52:18.07]
I am Herr Professor Dr.
Schrodinger, and who are you?
[00:52:22.03]
- Hey, Professor Doctor,
I am your lab assistant.
[00:52:25.04]
- [Schrodinger] Good.
[00:52:26.03]
Is the Gedankenexperiment ready?
[00:52:30.03]
- Yeah, well, we're
missing a couple of items.
[00:52:32.04]
I'm not sure where to get
any radioactive uranium.
[00:52:36.01]
- [Schrodinger] Kein Problem.
[00:52:36.09]
- [Schrodinger] Just borrow
some from Madame Curie.
[00:52:40.02]
But where's the lab?
[00:52:43.09]
- We're in the lab.
[00:52:45.07]
- [Schrodinger] Yeah, but
where is the Labrador?
[00:52:50.00]
- Oh, you want a dog?
[00:52:51.04]
Yeah, right.
[00:52:53.06]
- [Schrodinger] Go find one,
steal one if you must,
[00:52:55.06]
even if it means spending a night in jail.
[00:52:59.08]
And take some bolt cutters just in case.
[00:53:04.07]
[shambolic rock music]
[00:53:19.07]
Is everything ready?
[00:53:21.02]
- Uh, yep.
[00:53:22.00]
As you can see, I've
constructed it exactly
[00:53:24.06]
as you've described.
[00:53:26.03]
So in the top corner, we've
got the Geiger counter.
[00:53:29.09]
Now, that will detect whether
the uranium has decayed.
[00:53:34.01]
If it does decay, it
will release the ball,
[00:53:36.04]
which travels down the chute,
[00:53:38.07]
pushes the flaming car to the end,
[00:53:40.09]
which will cause the fist
to knock on the wall,
[00:53:44.00]
which triggers the door handle to open,
[00:53:46.01]
sending the hammer down
[00:53:47.00]
and smashing the flask of prussic acid
[00:53:49.08]
which will release poisonous gas.
[00:53:52.07]
- [Schrodinger] We shall now
see if the dog lives or dies.
[00:53:58.03]
- Thought this was just
like a good, good dank,
[00:54:01.01]
whatever experiment, right?
[00:54:03.03]
- [Schrodinger] Did you
learn that in lab school?
[00:54:05.05]
We are seeking a higher
truth than reality.
[00:54:08.04]
We need to find the hidden variable
[00:54:10.02]
that proves the dog is
either dead or alive.
[00:54:13.06]
We need to show those Copenhagen Dummköpfe
[00:54:16.06]
the absurdity of superposition
and entanglement.
[00:54:20.07]
Spukhafte Fernwirkung indeed.
[00:54:23.04]
- So the dog's gonna die?
[00:54:25.02]
- [Schrodinger] Quantum mechanics is not
[00:54:26.07]
for the faint-hearted.
[00:54:28.00]
The uranium decays and does not decay.
[00:54:30.04]
The poison gas is
released and not released.
[00:54:33.03]
The dog is both dead and alive.
[00:54:35.06]
We cannot know until we
open the box and observe it.
[00:54:39.00]
That's what the Copenhagen
crowd wants us to believe.
[00:54:43.05]
But don't worry, nature is not random
[00:54:46.04]
and God does not play
dice with the universe.
[00:54:49.08]
If Albert and I are wrong
about this, I will eat the dog.
[00:54:55.08]
Let's see the experiment.
[00:54:59.04]
[door latching]
[00:55:16.07]
[box lid thumping]
[00:55:19.00]
[atonal string music]
[00:55:28.00]
- [Interviewer] Werner?
[00:55:30.02]
What is the value of films for society?
[00:55:36.09]
- Films might change our...
[00:55:39.09]
our perspective of things,
[00:55:41.09]
and ultimately in the long term
[00:55:44.08]
it may be something valuable,
[00:55:47.06]
but there's a lot of
absurdity involved as well.
[00:55:56.04]
- [James] In 1957, Hugh
Everett proposed a solution
[00:55:59.07]
to the paradox of Schrodinger's
Gedankenexperiment.
[00:56:03.05]
Rather than a measurement
[00:56:04.06]
or an observation causing a
collapse of all possible worlds
[00:56:07.08]
into a single quantum state,
the wave function splits,
[00:56:11.02]
creating parallel and
independent realities.
[00:56:14.03]
[shambolic rock music]
[00:56:16.07]
But in other words,
[00:56:20.01]
and in one of all possible other worlds,
[00:56:26.07]
the dog lives.
[00:56:30.03]
♪ I wanna be a dog ♪
[00:56:34.00]
♪ I wanna be a dog ♪
[00:56:36.06]
- [James] A series of
experiments in the 1960s and '70s
[00:56:39.03]
would ultimately prove the
Copenhagen interpretation right,
[00:56:42.04]
and Schrodinger and Einstein wrong.
[00:56:45.01]
Until observed, the
cat was dead and alive,
[00:56:48.01]
neither dead nor alive.
[00:56:50.02]
No experiment has yet to demonstrate
[00:56:52.03]
that the dog might live on in
one of many other universes.
[00:56:55.09]
However, Schrodinger's
paradox in a box inspired
[00:56:59.00]
Oxford physicist David Deutsch
[00:57:01.02]
to conduct his own thought
experiments in 1985.
[00:57:04.08]
What if the cat, dog, or
in this case electron,
[00:57:07.09]
could communicate not only in this world,
[00:57:09.09]
but across all possible worlds,
[00:57:12.03]
not only in binary states
of alive, dead, on, off,
[00:57:15.08]
or zero, one, but in entangled
states of superposition?
[00:57:20.04]
Deutsch's brilliant idea
earned him the title,
[00:57:22.09]
Father of Quantum Computing,
[00:57:24.06]
one that he probably should have shared
[00:57:26.06]
with Richard Feynman and Yuri Manin.
[00:57:29.01]
But their ideas paved the way
[00:57:30.07]
for a new revolution in computing
[00:57:32.06]
based on subatomic
quantum bits, or qubits.
[00:57:36.05]
The race to build the first
quantum computer was on,
[00:57:39.05]
and to get a roadside view
we traveled to Silicon Valley
[00:57:42.09]
and then on to Shanghai, China.
[00:57:45.07]
- [James] Yep, we're on our way.
[00:57:48.01]
- Clearly, quantum is
going to be a huge change
[00:57:50.07]
because it technically
violates what we see,
[00:57:53.03]
everything around us.
[00:57:54.08]
And so, and I think that's
what makes quantum mechanics
[00:57:57.07]
so hard to understand,
because there is no,
[00:58:00.02]
if I step outside, you know,
[00:58:03.00]
there is no way to prove to me
[00:58:05.01]
that actually quantum mechanics is true.
[00:58:07.01]
And so it all feels very
exotic and abstract.
[00:58:11.02]
And I think if there has
to be a paradigm shift,
[00:58:13.03]
there has to be evidence that
we can actually use it easily.
[00:58:28.08]
- Richard Feynman was one of the founders
[00:58:31.00]
of Quantum Information Theory,
[00:58:33.04]
and I think he was
basically the first person
[00:58:36.04]
to propose to build a quantum computer.
[00:58:39.06]
[percussive drumming]
[00:58:44.04]
Once you start using a quantum computer
[00:58:47.00]
and start doing these experiments,
[00:58:49.03]
the quantum nature of the
world becomes something
[00:58:52.01]
that you internalize and make sense
[00:58:54.08]
and you kind of agree with it.
[00:58:56.06]
"Okay, that's the way the world works."
[00:58:58.08]
And it kind of demystifies it
[00:59:00.09]
in this kind of a really unusual way.
[00:59:04.03]
For myself, thinking of it as a race
[00:59:06.07]
is not necessarily so useful.
[00:59:08.08]
It's good to have a
competitive environment.
[00:59:12.03]
It always pushes you.
[00:59:14.00]
But I think that the race
is more against nature.
[00:59:17.07]
And if we can do an experiment
[00:59:19.08]
that checks the results
against a big supercomputer,
[00:59:23.03]
I think that's gonna be fairly convincing
[00:59:26.02]
to the people in the computer
science and technology field,
[00:59:30.06]
Silicon Valley managers
and executives if you like,
[00:59:34.04]
that, you know, this is
not just some pipe dream,
[00:59:36.08]
but it's really coming to be reality.
[00:59:39.03]
The one thing you learn
about qubits is, you know,
[00:59:42.00]
on paper everything looks good,
[00:59:43.08]
and then you start building
it and doing things like this,
[00:59:46.08]
and then you see all the
things that can go wrong
[00:59:49.02]
and the imperfections
and your assumptions.
[00:59:52.01]
But what's been amazing is,
[00:59:53.04]
as people work on it more and more,
[00:59:56.05]
you can kind of work
around the imperfections
[00:59:59.01]
or solve them and get things to work.
[01:00:01.08]
It just takes time to figure
out, you know, what to do.
[01:00:10.02]
- Well, I think the most interesting thing
[01:00:11.07]
about quantum mechanics is the
phenomenon of entanglement.
[01:00:16.07]
So what is entanglement?
[01:00:17.08]
Well, in classical physics
you can have a system
[01:00:21.08]
which is made out of parts,
[01:00:24.02]
and there's a nice property
[01:00:26.01]
which is that if you know everything
[01:00:28.04]
that you can possibly know
about the whole system,
[01:00:31.07]
then you also know everything
you can possibly know
[01:00:34.01]
about its parts.
[01:00:35.09]
So that seems very sensible, right?
[01:00:37.04]
That seems like a good way
for things to be organized.
[01:00:40.06]
The amazing thing about quantum mechanics
[01:00:42.03]
is that this is false.
[01:00:44.01]
So in quantum mechanics,
you can have a joint system
[01:00:47.01]
where you know everything
that you can possibly know
[01:00:49.09]
about the joint system,
[01:00:51.07]
but you know absolutely
nothing about its parts.
[01:00:56.09]
And this is so surprising, you know.
[01:00:58.08]
In some sense, it is the thing
which is counterintuitive
[01:01:02.03]
in quantum mechanics.
[01:01:04.09]
When we ask why are quantum
computers interesting,
[01:01:07.03]
why are they better than
classical computers?
[01:01:09.01]
Ultimately, it's because
they're using entanglement.
[01:01:13.03]
- [Speaker 1] If you don't
leave in about 10 minutes,
[01:01:14.04]
the police are coming.
[01:01:15.07]
- [James] Okay, all right.
[01:01:17.00]
If we wanna go that route, that's okay.
[01:01:21.04]
[indistinct chatter]
[01:01:27.09]
[gentle piano music]
[01:01:34.09]
[indistinct chatter]
[01:02:04.02]
[indistinct chatter]
[01:02:30.09]
[traffic noise]
[01:02:53.08]
[child exclaiming in Chinese dialect]
[01:03:03.01]
- Some of my labs will be here.
[01:03:06.00]
- [James] This is where
the labs are gonna be?
[01:03:07.05]
- Yeah, yeah.
- Oh, wow.
[01:03:08.04]
- 'Cause all the silver
conducting doesn't require...
[01:03:11.09]
- The shielding?
[01:03:13.01]
- ...filming or shielding,
[01:03:14.04]
because everything
shielded under minus 263.5.
[01:03:23.06]
[construction noises]
[01:03:35.01]
We did a quantum teleportation experiment
[01:03:37.08]
over 16 kilometers, yes, this year.
[01:03:42.01]
- [James] This is like
the experiment they did
[01:03:43.00]
in Vienna, too.
[01:03:43.08]
- [Speaker] Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yes.
[01:03:46.02]
- [James] And what's this one up here?
[01:03:47.06]
- Ah, this is Tienanmen Square.
[01:03:50.05]
We provide some secure
communications in this activity.
[01:03:56.01]
Quantum network used in financial.
[01:03:58.04]
- [James] Banking.
[01:03:59.03]
- Yeah, yeah, yeah, I think, yes.
[01:04:02.02]
- [James] Oh, that's the--
[01:04:04.03]
- This telephone is secured
by quantum communication.
[01:04:10.06]
This is the second time
President Xi came to USTC.
[01:04:17.05]
This is our concept light.
[01:04:22.03]
- [James] Now they're
all involved in quantum?
[01:04:26.01]
- [Speaker] Uh, yeah.
[01:04:27.05]
This one, and you also know
maybe Tencent, this one.
[01:04:32.03]
This is bank, bank, bank, bank, bank.
[01:04:38.00]
[both laughing]
[01:04:39.05]
- [James] So the banks
are heavily dependent
[01:04:41.02]
upon quantum encryption then?
[01:04:43.03]
- [Speaker] Yeah, yeah, yeah.
[01:04:47.08]
- So the quantum science
satellite project was led
[01:04:50.09]
by Professor Jian-Wei Pan.
[01:04:53.01]
It have multiple scientific goals.
[01:04:57.04]
One is to establish ground-to-satellite
[01:05:00.07]
quantum communication
[01:05:02.02]
so that we can greatly extend
[01:05:05.07]
the secure communication range
[01:05:09.01]
from about 200 kilometers
without, you know,
[01:05:13.06]
just use optical fiber, to
perhaps thousands of kilometers
[01:05:19.04]
in outer space.
[01:05:20.09]
Yeah, I think definitely it
is a very intensive race,
[01:05:25.08]
like Google, IBM, and Microsoft.
[01:05:29.09]
They all, you know, invest
heavily on quantum computers,
[01:05:34.07]
and I think China will
also invest some money
[01:05:40.05]
on quantum computers.
[01:05:42.00]
One article I read with great interest,
[01:05:46.02]
the title is, you know,
[01:05:48.01]
the distance between we and
God is the quantum computer.
[01:05:53.00]
Because we only 200 logic qubits,
[01:05:57.06]
200 is already-- the number is larger
[01:06:02.01]
than all the particles in the universe.
[01:06:05.00]
So I cannot imagine,
like, what we would have,
[01:06:09.07]
like a billion logic qubits.
[01:06:12.05]
That will be, that's out
of my mind, I cannot.
[01:06:15.05]
I don't have the ability to predict, yeah.
[01:06:21.09]
[hammer taps]
[01:06:23.03]
- [James] And have they
actually found fossils?
[01:06:24.03]
- [Speaker] Yeah, yeah.
[01:06:25.04]
- [James] Really?
[01:06:26.07]
- Yeah, yeah, it's... [indistinct].
[01:06:31.08]
- [James] That's great.
[01:06:35.00]
[hammer tapping]
[01:06:39.07]
- I think it's working very well.
[01:06:41.05]
It's almost only a little fossil left.
[01:06:45.08]
[dark ambient music]
[01:07:05.03]
[ethereal ambient music]
[01:07:10.00]
- [James] Over the past several years,
[01:07:11.03]
Project Q has invited a
singularly diverse group
[01:07:14.03]
to Q Station, the former
quarantine site of Sydney Harbor.
[01:07:17.08]
Physicists and philosophers,
computer and social scientists,
[01:07:21.00]
artists and writers, lawyers, diplomats,
[01:07:23.03]
and naval officers are
quarantined for three days,
[01:07:26.07]
where they are asked to step
outside their disciplines,
[01:07:29.01]
professions and comfort zones
[01:07:31.05]
to explore the societal, geopolitical,
[01:07:34.07]
and ethical implications
of a quantum future.
[01:07:41.04]
But then came the great interruptions.
[01:07:44.00]
First the horrific bush fires,
then the pandemic.
[01:07:47.08]
The emergency of climate change
[01:07:49.01]
and the exponential
spread of the coronavirus
[01:07:52.01]
was a wake-up call for us and many others.
[01:07:55.03]
As the Q Station itself became endangered
[01:07:57.09]
by smoke, fire, and virus,
[01:08:00.03]
its history returned with a vengeance.
[01:08:03.02]
Long before the quarantine
station was established
[01:08:05.08]
on the north head of Sydney
Harbor in the early 1830s,
[01:08:09.02]
the site was an important place
[01:08:10.07]
of ceremonial and teaching practices
[01:08:13.07]
as well as burial grounds for
the Indigenous of the area,
[01:08:17.00]
the Gadigal peoples of the Eora Nation.
[01:08:21.01]
In the first pandemic
recorded in Australia,
[01:08:23.04]
at least 50% of the Gadigal
population were wiped out
[01:08:26.07]
by the European smallpox virus in 1789.
[01:08:30.08]
The Native burial grounds
would be displaced
[01:08:33.02]
by those who came later
[01:08:34.06]
and died while in
quarantine from influenza.
[01:08:37.08]
The history of first
encounters between strangers
[01:08:40.08]
and strange diseases would
be repeated many times
[01:08:43.09]
in many places, and serve
as an important reminder
[01:08:47.00]
that climate emergencies and
pandemics are human tragedies
[01:08:50.07]
in which everyone is at risk,
but not equally so.
[01:08:56.01]
[droning didgeridoo music]
[01:09:00.02]
- Outside of the harbor, the
Gadigal clan is one of 29
[01:09:06.03]
that makes up the Eora Nation.
[01:09:08.09]
- Political, economic, racial, gendered
[01:09:11.02]
and other demographic factors mitigate
[01:09:13.07]
as well as elevate risk,
and fear factors divide
[01:09:16.08]
as well as unite peoples around the world.
[01:09:19.07]
At the most basic level of life and death,
[01:09:22.00]
climate emergencies and pandemics are
[01:09:24.05]
issues of human security,
[01:09:28.08]
first characterized in the
1990s by the United Nations as
[01:09:32.06]
"A child who did not die,
[01:09:34.05]
"a disease that did not
spread, a job that was not cut,
[01:09:37.07]
"an ethnic tension that did
not explode in violence,
[01:09:40.08]
"a dissident who was not silenced."
[01:09:47.00]
If the question of security is ultimately
[01:09:49.00]
about what makes us safe,
then the climate emergency
[01:09:51.09]
and COVID pandemic threw
into high relief the failure
[01:09:55.02]
of political regimes to keep us safe.
[01:09:57.08]
In too many instances,
decisions were made,
[01:10:00.03]
or more frequently not made,
[01:10:02.04]
by regimes at the national as
well as international level,
[01:10:05.07]
often making matters much worse
before making them better.
[01:10:09.06]
And yet, if there was
a light that showed up
[01:10:11.05]
through the cracks, it came from science.
[01:10:14.08]
Playing catch up and not
always getting it right,
[01:10:17.01]
contested by partisan politics,
[01:10:19.07]
science provided the
knowledge and technology
[01:10:22.04]
to slow, if not stop, climate change,
[01:10:25.02]
and to slow, if not stop, the spread
[01:10:27.03]
and to begin the cure
for the COVID pandemic.
[01:10:31.09]
The Project Q response was
to mobilize the metaphysics,
[01:10:34.07]
heuristics and aesthetics
of quantum mechanics
[01:10:37.04]
to better comprehend and communicate
[01:10:39.05]
how nothing so small as a photon of light
[01:10:42.03]
or strand of viral RNA
[01:10:43.09]
could have such profound global effects.
[01:10:47.01]
As Sydney went into a second
COVID lockdown, we staged Q6.
[01:10:51.02]
With a little help from Zoom
[01:10:52.07]
as a non-localized superpositioned event,
[01:10:55.06]
and using networked media,
[01:10:57.02]
we traveled from Sydney to Q
Station to a global audience.
[01:11:08.04]
Before we go down that
quantum rabbit hole,
[01:11:11.04]
I'd like to start with a quote.
[01:11:14.02]
Yogi Berra said, "The future
ain't what it used to be."
[01:11:18.09]
- Well, it's like he also said,
[01:11:21.09]
"Nobody goes there
anymore. It's too crowded."
[01:11:25.09]
I...
[01:11:28.09]
I think the pandemic is part of this,
[01:11:32.05]
but it's the last slap in the face
[01:11:35.05]
of a process that began
a couple of decades ago.
[01:11:40.03]
Maybe it's a structure of
feeling that is 21st century,
[01:11:44.04]
that history is accelerated,
[01:11:46.05]
that new things are happening faster
[01:11:48.05]
than they can be assimilated
[01:11:51.02]
and put into a coherent
picture in one's mind.
[01:11:54.03]
And then the pandemic made it all real.
[01:11:56.03]
Like, everybody had to change their lives
[01:11:58.05]
and you had to at that
point think to yourself,
[01:12:01.09]
"It really is a global culture."
[01:12:03.08]
I really could go down to a grocery store
[01:12:06.06]
that would be empty not
just of its toilet paper,
[01:12:09.00]
but its food.
[01:12:09.09]
And I'm utterly reliant on a global system
[01:12:13.04]
for my own personal life
[01:12:14.08]
that would be changed by global events.
[01:12:17.07]
The future is a potentiality,
a potential state.
[01:12:21.02]
And no, we can't know which
one thing is going to happen
[01:12:25.06]
until it has.
[01:12:26.06]
So when people think of science fiction
[01:12:28.07]
as predicting the future,
[01:12:30.07]
that would be a sad thing
to try to put on yourself,
[01:12:34.02]
'cause you can't do it
and it would be pointless.
[01:12:37.00]
And in fact, there are
people who talk about,
[01:12:39.01]
this is quantum again, the
Pauli exclusion principle.
[01:12:42.04]
If you write down a future,
[01:12:44.03]
it's certain that that
one will not come to pass
[01:12:47.08]
because the real future in any
earlier prediction would be
[01:12:51.00]
occupying the same space.
[01:12:54.02]
- This quote comes from the
Defense Sciences Office manager.
[01:12:58.04]
I just want your reaction,
[01:12:59.06]
because there's so many different ways
[01:13:01.01]
you can respond to this.
[01:13:02.09]
"Quantum computers could be transformative
[01:13:05.08]
"and the most important
technology we've ever seen,
[01:13:08.01]
"or they can be totally useless
[01:13:10.00]
"and these gigantic paperweights
[01:13:11.05]
"that are sitting in
labs across the country.
[01:13:14.05]
"That window of potential
surprise is the key.
[01:13:18.01]
"That's the kind of surprise
[01:13:19.03]
"that DARPA cannot allow to exist.
[01:13:21.07]
"It's our job to make sure
[01:13:22.08]
"that we eliminate those
kinds of surprises."
[01:13:28.07]
- You know, my reaction to
that quotation is firstly, wow,
[01:13:33.06]
isn't that brave to make that
kind of statement up front?
[01:13:37.06]
It does show that more innovative
sense of entrepreneurship
[01:13:41.07]
in research now that you
see inside government,
[01:13:44.01]
which is, "We are gonna do this work
[01:13:46.04]
"and it might well fail and
show that there's no result,
[01:13:49.05]
"but we need to understand
that there's no result
[01:13:51.09]
"'cause that will be
useful in and of itself."
[01:13:53.06]
And that's what we do know
about quantum technology,
[01:13:56.07]
because in government it's
inherently tricky making policy
[01:14:01.01]
around tech because so frequently
we're playing catch-up.
[01:14:05.06]
- One of many concerns I have
about that kind of statement
[01:14:08.05]
is it's really playing an
old political game of saying,
[01:14:13.03]
"Trust us," and expecting
the trust to flow
[01:14:15.08]
on the basis of sheer investment,
[01:14:19.05]
the magnitude of investment.
[01:14:21.00]
And I think we know from many, many
[01:14:23.02]
periods throughout history, but recently,
[01:14:25.04]
that you can't kind of
reverse engineer trust.
[01:14:28.04]
You can't just say, if it doesn't flow,
[01:14:30.02]
you can't go back and put it back in.
[01:14:32.03]
I think that's what we're finding
[01:14:33.03]
with a lot of technologies now,
that there's a fixation on,
[01:14:35.07]
"Oh, trust, trust, trust."
[01:14:36.09]
If you just obey the people on top,
[01:14:39.04]
you know, they'll have your back,
[01:14:40.08]
they'll make your future secure.
[01:14:42.04]
And I don't think people, I
don't think that works anymore.
[01:14:45.03]
- It's refreshing to hear,
[01:14:47.02]
in the context of a lot of
quantum hype around the world
[01:14:52.08]
that we've all experienced
certainly in the last few years,
[01:14:57.04]
to remind us that it's
still very early stages.
[01:15:01.02]
If there's actually a fundamental reason
[01:15:02.07]
that that thing's a paperweight,
[01:15:04.05]
then that's an even more
interesting scientific discovery
[01:15:07.06]
in building a universal quantum computer,
[01:15:10.00]
because that tells us there's
something about physics
[01:15:11.07]
that we don't, that quantum
mechanics doesn't explain.
[01:15:14.06]
And that means the best
theory we've got isn't,
[01:15:17.05]
we don't understand it right, so.
[01:15:19.09]
- I think what's interesting here is
[01:15:21.07]
that we are very much
working between the values
[01:15:24.08]
of the practical and the symbolic.
[01:15:26.05]
And there is enormous
symbolic power in quantum
[01:15:29.04]
regardless of whether it
actually does anything
[01:15:31.09]
at the practical level or not.
[01:15:33.08]
So when we see these types
of statements being produced
[01:15:38.03]
at the same time as large bags
of cash are being delivered,
[01:15:42.00]
I tend to see that more
as what is happening
[01:15:44.07]
in the geopolitical context
and what are the claims
[01:15:47.05]
to particular types of supremacy there,
[01:15:50.01]
rather than purely looking at it
[01:15:52.00]
from the perspective of
science and technology.
[01:15:54.00]
They are intertwined of course,
[01:15:55.08]
but I think we do need to look at this
[01:15:57.04]
in the context of the realpolitik
[01:15:59.07]
of what is happening at
the moment more broadly
[01:16:02.00]
in terms of the US's positioning.
[01:16:04.05]
And this is something that
DARPA has done for a long time.
[01:16:08.07]
- Quantum technologies come
with a plethora of applications
[01:16:12.02]
that could accelerate
our progress in solving
[01:16:14.06]
some of the most important
challenges of our times.
[01:16:18.02]
Quantum encryption can
secure communication.
[01:16:21.04]
Privacy can actually now be a reality.
[01:16:24.09]
Quantum simulations can help
us discover new materials,
[01:16:28.02]
new solutions, new technologies
[01:16:30.04]
that could help us in our
response to climate change,
[01:16:33.00]
that could help us create
the right development models
[01:16:36.06]
to create sustainable growth.
[01:16:39.00]
Quantum sensing could help
us predict weather patterns
[01:16:42.03]
and help us in our negotiating the extreme
[01:16:45.09]
and sometimes surprising
weather developments
[01:16:49.01]
that can create terrible outcomes.
[01:16:52.01]
India is looking at this
sector with keen interest
[01:16:55.08]
and is in fact, as a country,
investing in the future.
[01:16:59.05]
The most important would of course be,
[01:17:01.02]
will quantum compound
the ethical issues of AI?
[01:17:04.08]
We have seen artificial
intelligence and machine learning
[01:17:09.08]
creating certain unintended consequences.
[01:17:15.03]
- We are in the middle of, I think,
[01:17:16.07]
a perfect and intertwined
storm of a global pandemic,
[01:17:21.09]
unprecedented technological
development and disruption
[01:17:26.04]
and increased connectivity
all coming to the fore
[01:17:29.04]
at much the same time.
[01:17:31.05]
And so governments have to
grapple with these issues.
[01:17:34.01]
For us, it's about ensuring
that technology upholds
[01:17:36.08]
and protects liberal democratic values,
[01:17:39.06]
that it shapes and
builds secure, resilient
[01:17:42.02]
and trusted technologies,
[01:17:45.03]
and it fosters sustainable
economic growth and development.
[01:17:48.09]
- To me, a bigger aspect,
[01:17:50.06]
especially from an ethical
perspective, is quantum divide,
[01:17:54.01]
the gap between those who can
[01:17:56.01]
and are able to benefit from
the quantum technologies
[01:17:59.01]
and those who are not.
[01:18:01.02]
Narrowing down or closing
the quantum divide
[01:18:03.09]
will need to include efforts at quantum
[01:18:06.03]
and other emerging technologies
[01:18:08.04]
such as artificial intelligence, robotics,
[01:18:11.00]
how they can help societies,
[01:18:12.08]
and how this access can
be made to larger sections
[01:18:16.03]
of the global society.
[01:18:18.03]
Just to mention a few, a
gender divide, for instance,
[01:18:21.09]
a class divide between rich and poor,
[01:18:24.00]
or a geographical divide
between urban and rural.
[01:18:27.07]
Ethics will guide us to
ask some basic questions,
[01:18:30.02]
like what are the values that are guiding
[01:18:32.06]
the current quantum drive?
[01:18:34.02]
What choices do we have?
[01:18:36.07]
- How the shift from
linear to quantum causality
[01:18:40.08]
will require a fundamental rejig
[01:18:43.01]
in how we think about power,
ethics, and decision making,
[01:18:46.05]
and this unfortunately is
where parallels really fail us.
[01:18:51.01]
How would we, for example,
[01:18:53.04]
code accountability into a technology
[01:18:55.05]
where cause-and-effect
may be indeterminate
[01:18:57.07]
or where the act of observation
may change the outcome,
[01:19:01.05]
or where explainability and reconstruction
[01:19:04.02]
of how a decision is
made may be impossible?
[01:19:07.08]
Perhaps because quantum is going to be
[01:19:11.02]
so paradigm-shifting and world-changing,
[01:19:13.00]
that country should make a
fresh set of calculations
[01:19:15.05]
on how they pursue their
technology partnerships
[01:19:18.00]
in this area.
[01:19:21.05]
- Hello, I am Refik Anadol.
[01:19:23.04]
I'm a media artist and
director joining you
[01:19:26.01]
from Los Angeles, California.
[01:19:30.05]
I would like to share today
our recent collaboration
[01:19:34.02]
and one of the most inspiring
project in my journey
[01:19:37.04]
as an artist, "Quantum Memories."
[01:19:40.09]
The project is both inspired
by, and a speculation of,
[01:19:45.09]
the Many-Worlds Interpretation
in quantum physics,
[01:19:49.00]
a theory that holds that
there are many parallel worlds
[01:19:52.06]
that exist at the same
space and time as our own.
[01:19:57.05]
Tapping into the random
fluctuations of quantum noise
[01:20:01.05]
as a unique realm of
possibilities and predictions,
[01:20:05.03]
"Quantum Memories" provides
[01:20:07.05]
an interactive aesthetic experience
[01:20:10.03]
by tracking the audience's
movements in real time
[01:20:14.09]
and simulating how
their observer positions
[01:20:18.07]
indeed become entangled
[01:20:21.03]
with the visible outcomes of
the ever-changing artwork.
[01:20:26.09]
[ethereal ambient music]
[01:20:36.00]
- For me, it was seeing, like,
[01:20:38.02]
also how musical thinking went into
[01:20:42.02]
the actual discovery of quantum mechanics.
[01:20:46.05]
There was a philosophical,
you know, stuff.
[01:20:48.06]
There was mathematical,
von Neumann and Pauli
[01:20:51.07]
and all those cats.
[01:20:53.03]
But then there was de Broglie,
the French prince,
[01:20:56.00]
who was a violinist who, you know,
[01:20:58.09]
discovered de Broglie waves.
[01:21:00.06]
The association of matter and waves
[01:21:04.02]
came from his experience as a violinist.
[01:21:08.07]
I haven't touched my
horn in about two months,
[01:21:10.03]
but what I'll do is
just make something up,
[01:21:13.03]
try to do something Bach-ish in the--
[01:21:16.03]
I don't know, we'll see what happens.
[01:21:18.08]
[improvisational saxophone music]
[01:21:39.00]
- I think historically by
the end of the 19th century,
[01:21:42.01]
you know, scientists were pretty
sure that physics was over,
[01:21:45.08]
that they had figured
everything out, right?
[01:21:48.00]
And then, oops, here comes the quantum
[01:21:49.06]
and everything's not figured out.
[01:21:52.09]
So people like Heisenberg and Bohr
[01:21:58.06]
and certainly Pauli all looked, yeah,
[01:22:03.02]
they all turned to Hindu
thought, Buddhist thought,
[01:22:07.05]
Platonic thought as the
places in human experience
[01:22:12.03]
where the quantum scales up.
[01:22:14.08]
One of the sayings in
the physics world was,
[01:22:18.07]
"Shut up and calculate."
[01:22:22.01]
You know, in other
words, don't think about
[01:22:24.03]
the philosophical implications
of quantum mechanics.
[01:22:27.09]
Just do the damn math.
[01:22:30.01]
Just do something useful.
[01:22:31.06]
Well, that's what gets
you the bomb, you know?
[01:22:34.06]
Of course that gets us cell phones
[01:22:36.00]
and gets us all kinds of other things,
[01:22:38.00]
but that's dangerous.
[01:22:41.08]
[pensive ambient music]
[01:23:24.00]
- [James] The quantum
revolution that began
[01:23:25.08]
at the Solvay Conference
in 1927 is far from over.
[01:23:30.01]
Not many outside this remarkable
circle fully understood
[01:23:33.06]
just how radically quantum
mechanics would change the world.
[01:23:37.06]
One notable exception was
William Bennett Munro,
[01:23:40.06]
who used his 1927 presidential address
[01:23:43.05]
to alert the American
Political Science Association,
[01:23:46.08]
"It has been said that no
metaphysical implications
[01:23:50.01]
"are necessarily involved
in the quantum theory
[01:23:52.08]
"or in the doctrine of relativity,
[01:23:54.08]
"but it is difficult to believe
that this can be the case.
[01:23:58.00]
"A revolution so amazing in our ideas
[01:24:00.06]
"concerning the physical
world must inevitably carry
[01:24:03.07]
"its echoes into other
fields of human knowledge.
[01:24:06.07]
"New truths cannot be quarantined."
[01:24:09.09]
Rather than echo, a
deafening silence followed.
[01:24:13.05]
The silence cannot continue
[01:24:16.02]
as we face new quantum breakthroughs
that rival the creation
[01:24:19.04]
of the atomic bomb and the nuclear age,
[01:24:22.00]
the invention of the microprocessor
and the information age.
[01:24:29.04]
[upbeat electronic music]
[01:24:34.07]
When new technologies of
quantum computing, communication
[01:24:37.07]
and artificial intelligence
emerge from university labs,
[01:24:40.05]
big tech companies, and
national security agencies...
[01:24:43.07]
- [Speaker] Not just in Australia,
but all around the world.
[01:24:46.08]
- [James] When we awake to Q-Day,
[01:24:48.09]
the moment when all classically
encrypted information
[01:24:51.09]
is to be rendered visible
[01:24:53.03]
by quantum computers and algorithms,
[01:24:55.09]
what lessons then will we have learned
[01:24:58.00]
from past quantum revolutions?
[01:25:02.07]
We know from Albert
Einstein's famous lament
[01:25:06.08]
and Robert Oppenheimer's deep regret
[01:25:09.07]
how the first quantum
revolution changed everything
[01:25:12.07]
except our ways of thinking.
[01:25:21.03]
In the highest and possibly the last stage
[01:25:24.00]
of the second quantum revolution,
[01:25:25.08]
we seem unable to
comprehend, let alone manage,
[01:25:28.09]
the dangers of generative
artificial intelligence.
[01:25:33.01]
Now, as we face a third
quantum revolution,
[01:25:35.09]
we need to become fluent
in what Armen Sarkissian,
[01:25:39.07]
the former president of Armenia
and a theoretical physicist,
[01:25:43.02]
called "quantum politics."
[01:25:44.09]
- We are seeing a lot of
uncertainty, unpredictability,
[01:25:48.02]
and we have a complete discomfort
[01:25:50.02]
like scientists 100 years ago
[01:25:51.08]
when they couldn't
explain classical events.
[01:25:55.07]
So, welcome to the new world.
[01:25:57.07]
Welcome to the quantum world.
[01:26:04.03]
- [James] We need to revive
the internationalist spirit
[01:26:07.02]
of the Solvay Conference
[01:26:08.05]
to break out of antagonistic rivalries
[01:26:11.06]
and to free ourselves from
the disciplinary silos
[01:26:14.05]
that keep physicists and philosophers,
[01:26:16.08]
politicians and entrepreneurs,
humanists and artists
[01:26:20.08]
from talking, learning and
working with each other.
[01:26:24.04]
But we also need to
recognize the opportunity
[01:26:27.03]
as well as responsibility
[01:26:28.09]
that comes with a singular convergence
[01:26:30.08]
of quantum theory,
science, and technology.
[01:26:34.05]
Each of us increasingly
entangled, superpositioned,
[01:26:38.00]
and facing conditions
of radical uncertainty
[01:26:40.03]
in a third quantum revolution,
[01:26:42.06]
have the potential to create new realities
[01:26:45.03]
with every measurement, every
observation, every decision.
[01:26:51.03]
In other words, and in one
of many possible worlds,
[01:26:55.02]
the future is ours to make.
[01:26:58.00]
[pensive ambient music]
[01:27:28.03]
[ambient music continues]
[01:27:58.04]
[ambient music continues]
[01:28:01.08]