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Quantum Art & Uncertainty
Quantum Art & Uncertainty
Quantum Art & Uncertainty
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Quantum Art & Uncertainty

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At the core of both art and science we find the twin forces of probability and uncertainty. However, these two worlds have been tenuously entangled for decades. On the one hand, artists continue to ask complex questions that align with a scientific fascination with new discoveries, and on the other hand, it is increasingly apparent that creativity and subjectivity inform science's objective processes and knowledge systems.

In order to draw parallels between art, science and culture, this publication will explore the ways that selected art works have contributed to a form of cultural pedagogy. It follows the integration of culture and science in artists' expressions to create meaningful experiences that expose the probabilities and uncertainties equally present in the world of science.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 15, 2018
ISBN9781783209026
Quantum Art & Uncertainty
Author

Paul Thomas

Paul Thomas, M.D., FAAP, received his M.D. from Dartmouth Medical School and did his residency at UC San Diego. He is a board-certified fellow of the American Academy of Pediatrics and board-certified in integrative and holistic medicine and addiction medicine. His practice, Integrative Pediatrics, currently serves more than eleven thousand patients in the Portland, Oregon, area. He was named a top family doctor in America by Ladies’ Home Journal in 2004 and a top pediatrician in America in 2006, 2009, 2012, and 2014 by Castle Connolly. Dr. Thomas grew up in Zimbabwe (the former Rhodesia) and speaks both Shona and Spanish. He is the father of ten children (ages twenty to thirty-two). He lives with his family in Portland, Oregon.

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    Quantum Art & Uncertainty - Paul Thomas

    First published in the UK in 2018 by

    Intellect, The Mill, Parnall Road, Fishponds, Bristol, BS16 3JG, UK

    First published in the USA in 2018 by

    Intellect, The University of Chicago Press, 1427 E. 60th Street,

    Chicago, IL 60637, USA

    Copyright © 2018 Intellect Ltd

    All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without written permission.

    A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

    Copy-editor: MPS Technologies

    Cover designer: Aleksandra Szumlas and Paul Thomas

    Index: Lyn Greenwood

    Production manager: Mareike Wehner

    Typesetting: Contentra Technologies

    Print ISBN: 978-1-78320-901-9

    ePDF ISBN: 978-1-78320-903-3

    ePUB ISBN: 978-1-78320-902-6

    Printed and bound by Hobbs, UK.

    This is a peer-reviewed publication.

    Contents

    Acknowledgments

    Foreword

    Between Nothingness and Eternity

    Timothy Morton

    Introduction

    The Quantum Atmospherics of Consciousness

    Chapter 1: The Swerve

    Agency of the swerve

    Measurement and control

    The Solvay rupture

    Capturing reality

    The unpredictable swerve

    Counterfactual definiteness of art

    Swerve speed

    Quantum biology

    Chapter 2: The Diagram

    Convergence

    Diagram and the new language

    The line

    The flexible diagram

    Entanglement and space

    Multiverse

    Multiverse and parallel worlds

    Probability of facts

    In aid of the diagram

    Photonic traces

    Bergson’s diagram and quantum parallels

    Bacon’s synergies

    Chapter 3: Spin

    Quantum spin

    The creativity of the spin

    Quantum consciousness

    Consciousness and the swerve

    Chapter 4: The Graphene Moment

    The genealogy of graphite

    The haptic Atomic Force Microscope

    Agency and mediums

    The art of graphite

    Drawing out

    Performative agency

    Chapter 5: Cloud

    The itinerant cloud

    Shifting power of perspective

    Pre-cloud conscious

    Repositioning the cloud

    The machinic whole

    Engineer’s perspective

    Conclusion

    Fragments

    References

    Author’s Biography

    Index

    Acknowledgments

    I would like to acknowledge the support of Thomas Retter for his reflections, challenges, comments and elucidations and the support of my collaborator Kevin Raxworthy for all his work in developing the technical visualization of the quantum phenomena. I would also like to draw attention to the work of Professor Andrea Morello and Dr Juan Pablo Dehollain for their support with my artwork Quantum Consciousness based on their research in Quantum Computing. Thanks goes to Emma Crott and special thanks goes to Timothy Morton for contributing the foreword for this book.

    Finally, I would like to thank my wife Christina Newberry for putting up with me endlessly talking about quantum uncertainties.

    Paul Thomas, 2018

    Foreword

    Between Nothingness and Eternity

    Timothy Morton

    Rice University

    What is life? It’s a question answered most interestingly by physicists, not biologists. It’s a curious symptom of biology that it cannot question its initial starting assumption, namely the ‘life’ of which it is the science. Debates about the origins of life are notoriously becalmed in an ocean of doubt concerning whether metabolism or replication is the driver. This means that evolution theory, for example, can’t actually explain the origin of a single-celled organism, the most fascinating aspect of the whole thing. Evolution theory can explain what happens next – all lifeforms unintentionally act like human pigeon breeders, exerting adaptive pressure on them from all sides. But the starting position remains obscure.

    Two physicists have offered interesting explanations of life. One is a cosmologist, the other a quantum theorist. But the cosmologist deals with photons in his explanation, which makes him a quantum theorist by default. The quantum theorist is Erwin Schrödinger, whose What Is Life? has recently undergone a refreshment of study and discussion.

    The cosmologist, a young physicist named Jeremy England, has recently argued that if you just beam photons at atoms for long enough time, life will emerge. This is simple and amazing, because it implies that there really isn’t all that much to life (as opposed to non-life) as one might have thought. It’s a readily-available aspect of our reality. It’s all about patterns.

    Schrödinger’s What Is Life? is fascinating, because it argues that I wouldn’t be stable enough to write this sentence if it weren’t for millions of tiny quantum events taking place in my body. I would dissolve into a cloud of powder. My very solidity depends on how particles can suddenly change, become entangled, blur into one another. These properties bestow upon me what Schrödinger calls negentropy, a temporary suspension of the normal rules whereby the arrow of time moves only in one direction and things tend towards collapsing. Life is a little pocket of stability in the universe.

    But what kind of stability? A dynamic, metastable state that isn’t solid or permanent according to our ideas of such things. Life isn’t total presence, always consistent and smooth. It’s like one of Paul Thomas’s extraordinary artworks, subtle and trembling.

    Where do we locate this trembling in a metaphysical sense? We locate it between two kinds of death. Life is not the opposite of death, but a strange quivering of the needle between two different types of being dead. At one end of the spectrum we have total nonexistence. At the other end, we have total mechanical repetition, perpetual motion, the machination that Freud called the death drive. If the needle stops quivering between these poles and slips towards the pole of total nonexistence, the living being begins to dissolve, to drift into powder, to become the chemicals that composed it. If the needle stops quivering and is attracted to the pole of mechanical repetition, the living being becomes a relentless force, like a drill or a tornado.

    We live in a world where there is way too much attraction towards the mechanical pole, in the name of warding off the pole of total nonexistence. Agriculture as formulated in Mesopotamia and elsewhere in about 10,000 BC eventually gave rise to industry in order to keep its mechanically repetitive logistics going, and the end result, 200 years later, is mass extinction, politely called global warming, which in turn is politely called climate change. It’s the death drive all right. Humans have been weaponized. They have become a geophysical force on a planetary scale. Despite our individual intentions, and despite the actual statistical meaninglessness of our individual actions (don’t feel guilty, ecological awareness isn’t about that at all), humans as a massive collective force have become like the asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago, the asteroid that was the cause of the most recent mass extinction, the fifth one. Think about that. You are part of an asteroid hurtling towards earth, metaphorically speaking. As you read this, your human beingness is hurtling towards earth with massive destructive momentum.

    Art suspends and postpones this momentum. One keen reader of poetry once declared that poetry was the postponement of the end of the world. One more quivering, for old times’ sake. One more tremble. One more flicker of the needle, defying the magnetic attraction of the weaponizing mechanical death drive.

    Art that works on the trembling, fragile edge of quantum phenomena is particularly suspended between the two deaths. Paul Thomas does what artists do: he resists collapsing into oblivion (the art and culture equivalent of total nonexistence), and he resists falling into mechanical repetition (the dull round of churning out ‘stuff’). Thomas’s work is alive, but not in your granddaddy’s sense of being opposed to death, or for that matter, Ray Kurzweil’s sense of wanting to cheat death by having his body frozen until humans have conquered death. Such fantasies are part of the logistical structure that is now destroying earth. We should learn how to dissolve a little bit. A little bit of total nonexistence wouldn’t be so bad right now.

    Life as quivering between nothingness and eternity isn’t so easy to distinguish from the state we call undeath. This ghostly flicker is lively but not definitely alive, as we’ve seen. So thinking about lifeforms this way means that we allow them to be uncanny, hard to discriminate, hard to build walls around, inviting otherness, open to strangers, with all that this entails, as in the word host. This word comes from a Latin word (hostis) that can mean both friend and enemy. Exactly: real life is very uncertain, and a good thing too. The maniacal pursuit of certainty becomes more and more efficient at destroying its environment. There is some kind of link between the art of the quantum and the caring for the biosphere we call ecological awareness and politics. Quantum states are notoriously delicate, capable of collapsing into regular old ‘classical’ ones if you interfere with them too much. Likewise, beauty can be ruined if you think about it too hard or try to isolate its active ingredient in the work you are admiring. This fragility is immensely powerful, because it disturbs and challenges rigid binary ways of thinking and acting.

    The power of uncertainty. That’s what this book is all about.

    It’s a great honour to introduce this book to you. Paul Thomas is a brilliant observer of things, a fantastic decelerator who interrupts the normal speed of contemporary life. I once took a walk down a street with him that seemed to last for thousands of years because of the amazingly careful observation of every flake of paint, every crack between every building. Thomas is an observer of the in-between, as I’ve been arguing, the in-between that so often gets left out of the nice binary picture. But we all know that total nonexistence is impossible – plenty of philosophers, all the way back to Aristotle, have argued that there simply can’t be a void, because it would be impossible to measure or to traverse at all – if it had parts, in other words if it could be measured, it wouldn’t be a void. And we all know that perpetual motion is impossible. These poles are really tendencies within a continuum that is characterized entirely by ‘in-between-ness’, only now we need a better term because we’re no longer talking strictly about something in between two genuine poles. Perhaps we need to say spectrality? I’m uncertain.

    With the non-judgemental care characteristic of a good artist, Thomas has assembled a remarkable series of explorations here, explorations of every type of quantum phenomenon as they pertain to art. What’s particularly wonderful is how this book reconfigures what we think we know about the past, like all good art does. History is restructured. Turner, Bacon, Malevich, Coldstream, Cubism, Rauschenberg … history is in here, transmogrified.

    Towards the very end of the book, Thomas asks, ‘Is there a rupture that can occur in the human psyche that will enable us to see the atomic truth of our ongoing coexistence with the material world of which we are constituted but which we treat as other?’ Exactly. But this rupture is best thought as a gentle, and therefore ultimately threatening, quivering slit, a letting-vibrate of things that vibrate all by themselves without being mechanically pushed. Paul Thomas’s study is a way to begin to think how to let this happen.

    Introduction

    The Quantum Atmospherics of Consciousness

    This book builds on experimental and transdisciplinary ideas I first broached in my previous publication, Nanoart: The Immateriality of Art. In Nanoart, I sought to articulate a series of synchronistic relationships that reveal artistic practice as integral to giving form and order to our sense of the physical world. In this current publication, I continue to inquire into object-oriented ontologies (OOO), speculative realism and new materialism¹ – all topics of discussion in my previous book – but in Quantum Art and Uncertainty these ideas are all brought to bear on the problem of quantum phenomena and the epistemological challenge it poses to creative and scientific inquiry. I adopt an experimental discourse that challenges perspectives by exploring subconscious and conscious fragments that have been, and are currently, influencing the cultural discourse of our time. This book, via the act of experimental writing, reveals quanta that reflect, and are analogous to, the complex problem of making art that questions reality in the age of uncertainty when dealing with an immanence or speculation. This book does not intend to be a historical resource on quantum theory, uncertainty and art but rather a resource for the broad ideas in this field and how they can be engaged within the visual arts. As an artist, it is the peculiar nature of ideas and their poetic resonance for a particular vision, version, image, expression or sense of the world that challenges the creation of a new visual language. The idea does not have to be confirmed as true but has the potential to make work that enables a reconfiguration or rupture in how the object world is defined. For example, K. Eric Drexler’s 1986 publication Engines of Creation: The Coming Era of Nanotechnology gave a public face to nanotechnology, forecasting a potential problem which he called ‘gray goo’ (1986: 146) that could de-territorialize all matter. Drexler stated that ‘[t]he gray goo threat makes one thing perfectly clear: we cannot afford certain kinds of accidents with replicating assemblers’ (1986: 147). This is an example where speculative thinking created by science is refuted by science, yet the thought still has strong social and cultural agency. It is a strange kind of poetics at the heart of all matter that makes our comprehension of matter of such great interest to artists. The concept ‘gray goo’ does not need to be true; it is a provocation, a thought experiment that garners alternative problem finding for artists.

    In this publication there is no expert authoritative voice, there is no hierarchy of knowledge, because we know through speculative realism that human comprehension is limited and the only possibilities are arbitrary and contingent speculations. Unlike nanotechnology, it is hard to pin down the exact moment that the real effects of quantum mechanics² first took hold on creative imagination, and therefore where the real synergies lie between quantum theory and creativity. ‘Quantum’³ has been around for over a hundred years as a theoretical construct, but only in the twenty-first century, in light of the emerging agency of quantum computing, is it truly coming into its own.

    My interest in quantum theory was initially piqued during my first years at art school – even though I didn’t fully appreciate it at the time. I asked a question in the process of drawing a specific object in a still-life arrangement as to its spatial whereabouts; where did this object exist in space? I proposed that if I were to put a mirror in a given position within the room, the object would seemingly reappear – and would do so over and again for every mirror that duplicated the object. The object, I thought, must then be omnipresent, for a part of it could be replicated ad infinitum, limited only by the number of mirrors the room could hold. I now realize that at that time I was speculating on the physical conditions and mechanics of photons and the quantum materiality of the everyday. The light that made the still-life object visible, that brought the object into existence via sight, also transported the object to all other possible locations. The still-life object, the very icon of stasis and empirical stability, was here, I realized, entangled in a condition of ontological uncertainty.

    My initial interest as an artist arriving in Australia in 1977 was in spatiality – an ‘immigrants’ narrative but also as an explorer’s one (in the aesthetic exploration of new spatialities) searching and forming a series of speculations of my space and time. This led me to go through a scaling down process towards the infinitely small of nanotechnology and finally to the quantum.

    It was the inescapable problem of uncertainty that spurred my interest in quantum physics and in particular the photonic work of Richard Feynman.⁴ At the time, Feynman was the arbiter of quantum theory in popular science. He seemed to me to distil the very problem I had encountered. Feynman states on uncertainty in a 1956 talk given at the Caltech YMCA Lunch Forum:

    I think that when we know that we actually do live in uncertainty, then we ought to admit it; it is of great value to realize that we do not know the answers to different questions. This attitude of mind – this attitude of uncertainty – is vital to the scientist, and it is this attitude of mind which the student must first acquire. It becomes a habit of thought. Once acquired, one cannot retreat from it any more.

    (Feynman 1956)

    Taking the 1927 Fifth Solvay International Conference on Electrons and Photons as a touchstone, a significant point in time, this book will explore concepts of art and physics and their contributions to our image of the world. As a catalyst for the reunification of art, science and culture, this conference engendered a discourse of uncertainty and probability in the world that infected all disciplines of knowledge and inquiry, not simply physics. The 1927 Solvay conference aligned, for the first time, the creative and epistemological problem of the imaginary and the unknown with the imperceptible world of the quantum, coalescing into a global sense of ‘becoming’.

    In this book, concepts of quantum phenomena are dealt with through the perceptions of an artist as to quantum social and cultural impact. Of great importance is the way in which quantum has been historically, and is now currently, affecting our understanding of the everyday world that we constitute. To achieve this, we need to first create some definitions, to lay down the parameters of what is to be discussed. The Newtonian world was built up by making rules to explain everything we saw happening within the world. Physics started questioning the Newtonian laws that did not correlate with new theoretical experiments being formulated. These new sets of interrogations needed a different set of rules applied to the infinitely small that did not fit with our classical way of thinking and seeing – they were quantum.

    To explain the infinitely small as a new way of thinking, a new set of rules was applied via a fundamental classical experiment; the ‘double slit experiment’.⁶ Think of a fence and in front of the fence is a wall with two doors. We throw an apple through one door and then another through the other door. After a while we find we have two clumps of grouped apples stuck in the fence. Now, in the next quantum experiment, the apples are analogous to small particles going through the same two open doors and hitting a long sensor rather than a fence. What we find is the small particles counter-intuitively form clusters of stripe patterns on the sensor. If you decide to close one of the doors and throw small particles through the other, you would form a cluster on the sensor, but if you open the other door and repeated throwing the small particles through the one door what would happen? You think you could guarantee the small particle going through that one door again forming a cluster pattern. This would seem obvious in a classical world, but in a quantum world you would be wrong. Quantum physics has to give up on the statement that each small particle goes through just one door and therefore has to create a new set of rules for explaining these phenomena. Quantum physics says that if the small particle is not in position A, B or C then it must be in all possible positions at the same time; what is called a superposition.

    Quantum physics is fundamentally confusing and therefore not to be known. It appears to be counter-intuitive, even for the eminent physicist Richard Feynman who said in a televised lecture that ‘nobody understands quantum mechanics’.⁷ We have to use alternative ways of exploring these phenomena that can make sense of this world. It relies on mathematical probabilities to experience what can’t be defined, to intuit what can’t be comprehended. It is not to imagine what is not there but ‘our imagination is stretched to the utmost just to comprehend those things which are there’ (R. Feyman 1964).

    Key themes in this book are: the wave/particle duality, superposition, quantum entanglement, atomic spin, material agency and the ontology of uncertainty. These themes are all brought to bear upon, and through, the need for an injection of new experimentalism in the ways in which we give image to the world so as to inculcate a consciousness of the quantum. In the chapters that follow the problem of uncertainty is historicized within two distinct systems of thought: perspectivalist realism and quantum mechanics. These two different systems have each coerced new imaging tactics from creative fields, that is to say they have broken from tradition so as to instil a new paradigm of knowledge and thinking befitting the possibilities of material agency.

    Each chapter in this book hones in on a unique property or dimension or aspect of quantum phenomena and the impact of uncertainty. I offer a brief overview of these streams below that focus on the metaphorical cloud, diagrams, the spin, the swerve and graphene.

    Chapter 1: The Swerve – explores the swerve of

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