Thanks Kim, your article would seem worth quoting in full ..

Sent: Wednesday, 1 February 2023 2:31 PM
Subject: [LINK] Why More Physicists Are Starting to Think Space and Time Are 
‘Illusions’

https://www.thedailybeast.com/why-more-physicists-are-starting-to-think-space-and-time-are-illusions

> A concept called “quantum entanglement” suggests the fabric of the universe 
> is more
> interconnected than we think. And it also suggests we have the wrong idea 
> about reality.

This past December, the physics Nobel Prize was awarded for the experimental 
confirmation of a quantum phenomenon known for more than 80 years: 
entanglement. As envisioned by Albert Einstein and his collaborators in 1935, 
quantum objects can be mysteriously correlated even if they are separated by 
large distances. But as weird as the phenomenon appears, why is such an old 
idea still worth the most prestigious prize in physics?

Coincidentally, just a few weeks before the new Nobel laureates were honored in 
Stockholm, a different team of distinguished scientists from Harvard, MIT, 
Caltech, Fermilab and Google reported that they had run a process on Google’s 
quantum computer that could be interpreted as a wormhole. Wormholes are tunnels 
through the universe that can work like a shortcut through space and time and 
are loved by science fiction fans, and although the tunnel realized in this 
recent experiment exists only in a 2-dimensional toy universe, it could 
constitute a breakthrough for future research at the forefront of physics.

But why is entanglement related to space and time? And how can it be important 
for future physics breakthroughs? Properly understood, entanglement implies 
that the universe is “monistic”, as philosophers call it, that on the most 
fundamental level, everything in the universe is part of a single, unified 
whole. It is a defining property of quantum mechanics that its underlying 
reality is described in terms of waves, and a monistic universe would require a 
universal function.

Already decades ago, researchers such as Hugh Everett and Dieter Zeh showed how 
our daily-life reality can emerge out of such a universal quantum-mechanical 
description. But only now are researchers such as Leonard Susskind or Sean 
Carroll developing ideas on how this hidden quantum reality might explain not 
only matter but also the fabric of space and time.

Entanglement is much more than just another weird quantum phenomenon. It is the 
acting principle behind both why quantum mechanics merges the world into one 
and why we experience this fundamental unity as many separate objects. At the 
same time, entanglement is the reason why we seem to live in a classical 
reality. It is—quite literally—the glue and creator of worlds.

Entanglement applies to objects comprising two or more components and describes 
what happens when the quantum principle that “everything that can happen 
actually happens” is applied to such composed objects.

Accordingly, an entangled state is the superposition of all possible 
combinations that the components of a composed object can be in to produce the 
same overall result. It is again the wavy nature of the quantum domain that can 
help to illustrate how entanglement actually works.

Picture a perfectly calm, glassy sea on a windless day. Now ask yourself, how 
can such a plane be produced by overlaying two individual wave patterns? One 
possibility is that superimposing two completely flat surfaces results again in 
a completely level outcome. But another possibility that might produce a flat 
surface is if two identical wave patterns shifted by half an oscillation cycle 
were to be superimposed on one another, so that the wave crests of one pattern 
annihilate the wave troughs of the other one and vice versa. If we just 
observed the glassy ocean, regarding it as the result of two swells combined, 
there would be no way for us to find out about the patterns of the individual 
swells.

What sounds perfectly ordinary when we talk about waves has the most bizarre 
consequences when applied to competing realities. If your neighbor told you she 
had two cats, one live cat and a dead one, this would imply that either the 
first cat or the second one is dead and that the remaining cat, respectively, 
is alive—it would be a strange and morbid way of describing one’s pets, and you 
may not know which one of them is the lucky one, but you would get the 
neighbor’s drift.

Not so in the quantum world. In quantum mechanics, the very same statement 
implies that the two cats are merged in a superposition of cases, including the 
first cat being alive and the second one dead and the first cat being dead 
while the second one lives, but also possibilities where both cats are half 
alive and half dead, or the first cat is one-third alive, while the second 
feline adds the missing two-thirds of life.

In a quantum pair of cats, the fates and conditions of the individual animals 
get dissolved entirely in the state of the whole. Likewise, in a quantum 
universe, there are no individual objects. All that exists is merged into a 
single “One.”

“I’m almost certain that space and time are illusions. These are primitive 
notions that will be replaced by something more sophisticated.” — Nathan 
Seiberg, Institute for Advanced Study

Quantum entanglement reveals to us a vast and entirely new territory to 
explore. It defines a new foundation of science and turns our quest for a 
theory of everything upside down—to build on quantum cosmology rather than on 
particle physics or string theory.

But how realistic is it for physicists to pursue such an approach? 
Surprisingly, it is not just realistic—they are actually doing it already. 
Researchers at the forefront of quantum gravity have started to rethink 
space-time as a consequence of entanglement. An increasing number of scientists 
have come to ground their research in the nonseparability of the universe. 
Hopes are high that by following this approach they may finally come to grasp 
what space and time, deep down at the foundation, really are.

Whether space is stitched together by entanglement, physics is described by 
abstract objects beyond space and time or the space of possibilities 
represented by Everett’s universal wave function, or everything in the universe 
is traced back to a single quantum object—all these ideas share a distinct 
monistic flavor.

At present it is hard to judge which of these ideas will inform the future of 
physics and which will eventually disappear. What’s interesting is that while 
originally ideas were often developed in the context of string theory, they 
seem to have outgrown string theory, and strings play no role anymore in the 
most recent research.

A common thread now seems to be that space and time are not considered 
fundamental anymore. Contemporary physics doesn’t start with space and time to 
continue with things placed in this preexisting background. Instead, space and 
time themselves are considered products of a more fundamental projector reality.

Nathan Seiberg, a leading string theorist at the Institute for Advanced Study 
at Princeton, New Jersey, is not alone in his sentiment when he states, “I’m 
almost certain that space and time are illusions. These are primitive notions 
that will be replaced by something more sophisticated.” Moreover, in most 
scenarios proposing emergent space-times, entanglement plays the fundamental 
role.

As philosopher of science Rasmus Jaksland points out, this eventually implies 
that there are no individual objects in the universe anymore; that everything 
is connected with everything else: “Adopting entanglement as the world making 
relation comes at the price of giving up separability. But those who are ready 
to take this step should perhaps look to entanglement for the fundamental 
relation with which to constitute this world (and perhaps all the other 
possible ones).”

Thus, when space and time disappear, a unified One emerges.

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