Seth Lloyd Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Seth Lloyd's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Professor Seth Lloyd's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 41 quotes on this page collected since August 2, 1960! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
All quotes by Seth Lloyd: Computers Energy Quantum Mechanics Universe more...
  • Quantum mechanics is just completely strange and counterintuitive. We can't believe that things can be here [in one place] and there [in another place] at the same time. And yet that's a fundamental piece of quantum mechanics. So then the question is, life is dealing us weird lemons, can we make some weird lemonade from this?

    "A Quantum Leap in Computing". NOVA Interview, www.pbs.org. July 21, 2011.
  • When you zap things with light to build quantum computers, you're hacking existing systems. You're hijacking the computation that's already happening in the universe, just like a hacker takes over someone else's computer.

    "Life, the Universe, and Everything". WIRED Interview, www.wired.com. March 1, 2006.
  • Nothing in life is certain except death, taxes and the second law of thermodynamics. All three are processes in which useful or accessible forms of some quantity, such as energy or money, are transformed into useless, inaccessible forms of the same quantity. That is not to say that these three processes don't have fringe benefits: taxes pay for roads and schools; the second law of thermodynamics drives cars, computers and metabolism; and death, at the very least, opens up tenured faculty positions.

    School   Law   Car  
    Nature 430, 971, August 26, 2004.
  • Meaning is like pornography, you know it when you see it.

    Seth Lloyd (2011). “Programming The Universe: A Quantum Computer Scientist Takes on the Cosmos”, p.32, Random House
  • All physical systems can be thought of as registering and processing information, and how one wishes to define computation will determine your view of what computation consists of.

  • Science consists exactly of those forms of knowledge that can be verified and duplicated by anybody.

    Form  
  • If you take a more Darwinian point of view the dynamics of the universe are such that as the universe evolved in time, complex systems arose out of the natural dynamics of the universe.

    Hair   Views   Dynamics  
  • Science has an uncomfortable way of pushing human beings from center stage. In our prescientific stories, humans began as the focal point of Nature, living on an Earth that was the center of the universe. As the origins of the Earth and of mankind were investigated more carefully, it became clear that Nature had other interests beyond people, and the Earth was less central than previously hoped. Humankind was just one branch of the great family of life, and the Earth is a smallish planet orbiting an unexceptional sun quite far out on one arm of a run-of-the-mill spiral galaxy.

  • The primary consequence of the computational nature of the universe is that the universe naturally generates complex systems, such as life. Although the basic laws of physics are comparatively simple in form, they give rise, because they are computationally universal, to systems of enormous complexity.

    Simple   Law   Giving  
  • Yes, I am a quantum mechanic! Those darn quantum computers break all the time.

    "Life, the Universe, and Everything". WIRED Interview, www.wired.com. March 1, 2006.
  • Another feature that everybody notices about the universe is that it's complex.

  • What's happened with society is that we have created these devices, computers, which already can register and process huge amounts of information, which is a significant fraction of the amount of information that human beings themselves, as a species, can process.

  • When it comes to their capacity to screw things up, computers are becoming more human every day.

  • Quantum mechanics is weird. I don't understand it. Just live with it. You don't have to understand the nature of things in order to build cool devices.

    "Seth Lloyd on Quantum Computing" by Scott Dewing, blog.insidethebox.org, September 23, 2011.
  • The amount of information that can be stored by the ultimate laptop, 10 to the 31st bits, is much higher than the 10 to the 10th bits stored on current laptops.

  • Some folks think life and technology and mind can keep expanding forever. Others say it can't. We are still not clear on that.

    "Life, the Universe, and Everything". Interview with Kevin Kelly, www.wired.com. March 01, 2006.
  • If you wanted to build the most powerful computer you could, you can't do better than including everything in the universe that's potentially available.

  • Instead of having to be a member of the Royal Society to do science, the way you had to be in England in the 17th, 18th, centuries today pretty much anybody who wants to do it can, and the information that they need to do it is there.

  • Indeed, as the above calculation indicates, to take full advantage of the memory space available, the ultimate laptop must turn all its matter into energy.

    Memories   Space   Energy  
  • Bits of ignorance are like viruses that are copied and spread by interaction.

  • The history of the universe is, in effect, a huge and ongoing quantum computation. The universe is a quantum computer.

  • Nothing in life is certain except death, taxes, and the second law of thermodynamics.

    Nature 430, 971, August 26, 2004.
  • There are considerable advantages to using many degrees of freedom to store information, stability and controllability being perhaps the most important.

  • We couldn't build quantum computers unless the universe were quantum and computing. We can build such machines because the universe is storing and processing information in the quantum realm. When we build quantum computers, we're hijacking that underlying computation in order to make it do things we want: little and/or/not calculations. We're hacking into the universe.

    "Q&A: Seth Lloyd". Interview with Jason Pontin, www.technologyreview.com. July 1, 2006.
  • Unlike mathematical theorems, scientific results can't be proved. They can only be tested again and again, until only a fool would not believe them. I cannot prove that electrons exist..........if you don't believe in them I have a high voltage cattle prod I'm willing to apply as an argument on their behalf. Electrons speak for themselves.

    Believe   Fool   Argument  
  • For hundreds of millions of years, Sex was the most efficient method for propagating information of dubious provenance: the origins of all those snippets of junk DNA are lost in the sands of reproductive history. Move aside, Sex: the world-wide Web has usurped your role.

    Sex   Moving   Dna  
    "Move Aside, Sex". The Edge Annual Question — 2010: "How Is the Internet Changing the Way You Think?", www.edge.org. 2010.
  • Of course, one way of thinking about all of life and civilization is as being about how the world registers and processes information. Certainly that's what sex is about; that's what history is about.

    "Newton's Principia Revisited". Book by Michael Schmiechen, 2009.
  • I would suggest, merely as a metaphor here, but also as the basis for a scientific program to investigate the computational capacity of the universe, that this is also a reasonable explanation for why the universe is complex.

  • Computers are famous for being able to do complicated things starting from simple programs.

  • At some point, Moore's law will break down.

    Seth Lloyd (2011). “Programming The Universe: A Quantum Computer Scientist Takes on the Cosmos”, p.157, Random House
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    Seth Lloyd quotes about: Computers Energy Quantum Mechanics Universe