David Deutsch Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of David Deutsch's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Physicist David Deutsch's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 29 quotes on this page collected since 1953! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
All quotes by David Deutsch: more...
  • Science is objective. And in my view we cannot take any experimental results seriously except in the light of good explanations of them.

  • Humans may or may not have cosmic significance, and if they do, it will be by hitching a ride on the objective centrality of knowledge in the cosmic scheme of things.

  • Is the human race a universal constructor?

  • The brain is the only kind of object capable of understanding that the cosmos is even there, or why there are infinitely many prime numbers, or that apples fall because of the curvature of space-time, or that obeying its own inborn instincts can be morally wrong, or that it itself exists.

    "Philosophy will be the key that unlocks artificial intelligence" by David Deutsch, www.theguardian.com. October 3, 2012.
  • Quantum computation is a distinctively new way of harnessing nature. It will be the first technology that allows useful tasks to be performed in collaboration between parallel universes.

    "The Fabric of Reality: The Science of Parallel Universes and Its Implications". Book by David Deutsch. Chapter 9, 1997.
  • I chop and change between what is called 'work' and what is called 'recreation.' There are no discontinuities in my day. I only play tennis with people I find interesting.

  • Like every other destruction of optimism, whether in a whole civilisation or in a single individual, these must have been unspeakable catastrophes for those who had dared to expect progress. But we should feel more than sympathy for those people. We should take it personally. For if any of those earlier experiments in optimism had succeeded, our species would be exploring the stars by now, and you and I would be immortal.

  • I don't think it would be a good idea for scientists to have more political power. Scientists as a group are more inclined to try to derive an ought from an is, than the population at large.

  • Where we have good, testable explanations, they then have to be tested, and we drop the ones that fail the tests.

  • Time travel may be achieved one day, or it may not. But if it is, it should not require any fundamental change in world-view, at least for those who broadly share the world view I am presenting in this book.

    "The Fabric of Reality". Book by David Deutsch, August 1, 1997.
  • Despite the unrivaled empirical success of quantum theory, the very suggestion that it may be literally true as a description of nature is still greeted with cynicism, incomprehension, and even anger.

  • If you reject the infinite, you are stuck with the finite, and the finite is parochial... the best explanation of anything eventually involves universality, and therefore infinity. The reach of explanations cannot be limited by fiat.

  • If you can’t program it, you haven’t understood it.

    "The Beginning of Infinity: Explanations That Transform the World". Book by David Deutsch, 2004.
  • The most important application of quantum computing in the future is likely to be a computer simulation of quantum systems, because that's an application where we know for sure that quantum systems in general cannot be efficiently simulated on a classical computer.

    "The Father of Quantum Computing". Interview with Quinn Norton, www.wired.com. February 15, 2007.
  • It is possible to build a virtual-reality generator whose repertoire includes every possible environment.

    "The Fabric of Reality". Book by David Deutsch, August 1, 1997.
  • Base metals can be transmuted into gold by stars, and by intelligent beings who understand the processes that power stars, but by nothing else in the universe.

  • I myself believe that there will one day be time travel because when we find that something isn't forbidden by the over-arching laws of physics we usually eventually find a technological way of doing it.

  • No precautions, and no precautionary principle, can avoid problems that we do not yet foresee. We need a stance of problem-fixing, not just problem-avoidance.

  • The overwhelming majority of theories are rejected because they contain bad explanations, not because they fail experimental tests.

    David Deutsch (2011). “The Fabric of Reality”, p.13, Penguin UK
  • Feeling insignificant because the universe is large has exactly the same logic as feeling inadequate for not being a cow.

    "Books for giving: science" by Tim Radford, www.theguardian.com. December 1, 2011.
  • If we can't program it, we can't understand it.

  • To me quantum computation is a new and deeper and better way to understand the laws of physics, and hence understanding physical reality as a whole.

    Reality  
    "The Father of Quantum Computing". Interview with Quinn Norton, www.wired.com. February 15, 2007.
  • The truly privileged theories are not the ones referring to any particular scale of size or complexity, nor the ones situated at any particular level of the predictive hierarchy - but the ones that contain the deepest explanations.

    David Deutsch (2011). “The Fabric of Reality”, p.31, Penguin UK
  • The whole [scientific] process resembles biological evolution. A problem is like an ecological niche, and a theory is like a gene or a species which is being tested for viability in that niche.

  • The quantum theory of parallel universes is not the problem, it is the solution. It is not some troublesome, optional interpretation emerging from arcane theoretical considerations. It is the explanation - the only one that is tenable - of a remarkable and counter-intuitive reality.

    Reality  
    "The Fabric of Reality". Book by David Deutsch, August 1, 1997.
  • The theory that the biosphere was created without evolution, a few thousand years ago, is ruled out by overwhelming scientific evidence. To claim that there are 'alternative (always better) Biblical explanations of the same data', which make creationism a reasonable alternative to our best theories of biology and physics, is appalling intellectual dishonesty.

  • Every problem that is interesting is also soluble.

    David Deutsch's response to the Edge Annual Question: "What is Your Law?", www.edge.org. 2004.
  • Discovering a new explanation is inherently an act of creativity.

  • Our best theories are not only truer than common sense, they make more sense than common sense...

    David Deutsch (2011). “The Fabric of Reality”, p.6, Penguin UK
Page 1 of 1
We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 29 quotes from the Physicist David Deutsch, starting from 1953! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
David Deutsch quotes about: