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Quantum Test Found For Mathematical Undecidability

KentuckyFC writes "Philosophers have long wondered at the profound link between mathematics and physics, but how deep does this connection go? Pretty deep according to the results of a quantum experiment exploring the nature of mathematical undecidability. Here's how: any logical system must be based on axioms, which are propositions that are defined to be true. A proposition is logically independent from these axioms if it can neither be proved nor disproved from them; mathematicians say it is undecidable. In the experiment, researchers encoded a set of axioms as quantum states. A particular measurement on this system can then be thought of as a proposition which, if undecidable, yields a random result — which is what they found. 'This sheds new light on the (mathematical) origin of quantum randomness in these measurements,' say the researchers (abstract)."

1 of 223 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Huh, I wonder why no one thought of that before by gstoddart · · Score: 5, Funny

    Seems intuitively obvious to the casual observer

    Ah, but now you've changed it again. ;-)

    Cheers

    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.