Quantum Mechanics: Now what’s the Real World?

My last blog post was a link to the great podcast interview Anna Farmery did around a few key concepts from Growing @ the Speed of Change. The one area she had not heard of, and especially fascinated her, was the very strange new field of quantum mechanics. I find this topic incredibly intriguing and have been reading numerous books and watching documentaries on it. I am looking forward to watching “The Quantum Activist” DVD featuring Amit Goswami, physics professor (emeritus at the University of Oregon and author of ten books) that I just received last week.

Niels Bohr, a Danish physicist who received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1922 for his pioneering contributions to modern understandings of atomic structure and quantum mechanics, said, “Those who are not shocked when they first come across quantum theory cannot possibly have understood it.” By the late 19th century, what’s now considered old or classical physics had established laws or “facts” of nature which explained quite neatly and seemingly completely how our physical world worked. The “real world” was fixed and known.

But as knowledge advanced and as abilities to observe and measure the physical world improved, bizarre new findings threw the mother of all curve balls at scientists’ views of how things really work. Reality shifted yet again.

Quantum mechanics deals with the behavior of matter and energy at the infinitesimally minute level of atoms and subatomic particles. Here’s a brief sample of the weird and wonderful discoveries that have emerged since the German physicist Max Planck published his paper in 1900. It ushered in the era of “new physics” or quantum mechanics:

• “Quantum entanglement” shows that two particles can be separated by vast distances and somehow are connected; that manipulation of one particle causes a reaction in the other.

• In the quantum world, particles behave so unpredictably that the best scientists can do is make probability guesses as to what might happen.

• Light behaves like both waves of energy and particles of matter.

• Solid matter doesn’t exist. We and everything around us are made up of interacting energy or force-fields.

• Based on calculations of physical mass in the universe, scientists can only find about five percent of the matter needed to hold it all together. A major scientific search is now underway for this “dark matter” and “dark energy,” for instance with the 27-kilometer Large Hadron Collider built by the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN.)

• Some particles travel backward in time. Some appear out of nowhere and then disappear in completely random patterns.

• “Empty spaces” within and between atoms are so full of energy that an area the size of a marble contains more energy than all the solid matter in the known universe.

• There’s strong evidence to suggest that there are seven or more additional dimensions in the universe beyond the known dimensions of width, length, depth (3D) and time.

• Particles can be in two places at once – sometimes even thousands of places at the same time.

• It’s impossible to objectively measure quantum behavior. The observer’s very presence changes the experiment’s outcome.

Talk about the speed of change! We’re clearly a long, long way from defining any sort of objective or definite “reality.” Reality is a moving target. What’s “real” to us today will be considered naïve and laughable to our great-great-descendants centuries from now.

December 3 Complimentary Webcast

Today’s blog post was adapted from Growing @ the Speed of Change. I’m delivering a no charge webcast on Dec. 3rd at 1:30 p.m. (Eastern Standard Time/GMT -05:00) that will explore key themes found in my new book. We won’t talk about the theories of quantum mechanics. But this high-level overview will give you, your team, and your organization, practical tips and techniques to apply immediately. Click here for more information, including a detailed agenda and registration.

2 Comments

  1. Posted November 27, 2009 at 1:02 pm | Permalink

    Hi, Jim. I smiled when I saw this posting. As you know, my first career was as a nuclear physicist before I moved into business and strategy - that’s where I mastered complexity and chaos theory - the lens I use for my work now.

    The interesting thing is that this goes far beyond the quantum world. There is growing evidence in fields from quantum physics to psychology to cosmology and even to organizational theory that many of the fundamentals from quantum physics apply in our everyday world.

    What scientists are finding is that, just as our universe is permeated by gravitational and electromagnetic fields, there is an information field (what some are calling the Akashic Field) that permeates and penetrates the entire universe.

    This is an information field that we can tap into to increase our effectiveness and understanding of what’s happening. It is through this field that conscious intention can change everyday results. This links in to the effectiveness of goal-setting and creating a clear vision for yourself personally or corporately. We’re finally finding the science that backs it up.

    I know this sounds pretty out there, but there’s growing scientific evidence that supports this. A great synthesis of these data is in the book ‘Science and the Akashic Field’ by Ervin Laszlo (or any book by Laszlo).

    Really exciting to see you bringing this to the forefront, Jim. It’s an exciting arena and it really lets us understand the real rules we operate by in our day-to-day lives.

  2. Ian Percy
    Posted January 6, 2010 at 11:50 am | Permalink

    Sorry to be so late to this conversation Jim and Ravi. It is THE conversation to have, everything else is yesterday’s news.

    This whole “quantum energy” thing is not as “out there” as most think. I suggest it is all very current and is gaining interest from significant corporations very quickly. The challenge in using these insights effectively is in the ‘languaging’ of them. Actually most difficulties in the transformation process are due to language.

    These insights into the quantum and energetic dimensions of our existence are anything but “New Age.” Indeed they have been talked about since the beginning of time. I could give you quantum quotes and you wouldn’t know if they came from Pantanjali in 2nd century BC or from Stephen Hawking yesterday.

    Many organizations in Asia, for example, have designated “Intuitives” on staff and that’s beginning to happen in North America as well.

    What I’ve found is that many senior executives (along with the rest of us) are very much into the mysteries of the energetic realm. They are secretly reading Gregg Braden, Bruce Lipton, Lynne McTaggart, Ervin Laszlo, Michio Kaku and at the very least Dyer. The trouble is they’re closet quantum disciples! No one has given them permission to discuss how energetic principles can create exponential leaps in performance and profitability on a Monday morning. But it’s coming!

    I’m now defining “leadership” as “the alignment of the organization’s energy toward its highest purpose.” Health care is all about administering energy to those who lack it. Retail is failing pathetically because it’s an energy vacuum. Teamwork is about integrated energies. Those companies that learn about and use this power first will own their market space.

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  1. [...] is rapidly redefining the blurry lines of reality and fantasy. My blog post on “Quantum Mechanics: Now What’s the Real World?” (also in December’s issue of The Leader Letter) invoked this insightful response from my [...]

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