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Physicist and engineer Ian Jamieson takes us through the history of developments in science that lead to modern theories of quantum consciousness and within that how dowsing may work. It's not easy to follow Ian's discussion but it is a great summary and a fantastic way to see how one scientists work builds upon another's and how we have developed our thinking in even comparatively recent years on how our reality seems to materialise. Try to stick with it and Id suggest try not to skip through sections as Ian's progress is logical and all sections help the end hypothesis. Along the way there are some fascinating insights. For example, Heisenberg's approach which can be summarised as, "the universe reveals itself in the questions we ask of it." To help you see what is covered in the video and where you might like to do more research of your own, the following is broadly the flow of those he cites and key points of content: Ian begins with some background to traditional science in which Isaac Newton is regarded as the founding father: Isaac Newton Kepler Tycho Brahe (Danish astronomer) David Hume (Scottish philosopher) “Black swan events” Hulme Questioned causality, the brain is a great correlator of information and from that infers time and causality and such processes. Karl Popper his book “the logic of scientific discovery” suggested that theories can be held to be true until such time that new information requires they either be adjusted or abandoned (such as Einstein’s work requiring adjustment of Newtonian Physics. Thomas Kuhn's book: “the logic of scientific revolution” Current theoretical thinking is that the basic underlying form of the universe is not classical and cant be defined by Newtonian Laws which work adequately at slow speeds but the universe works on quantum laws and is built from these. Max Planck De Broglie Schrodinger (Austrian physicist) wave equation Max Bourne (mathematician?) Heisenberg Niels Bohr and his complementarity principle Half silvered mirror experiment and quantum superposition Measurement and the Quantum wave collapse Decoherence and the Quantum mixed state and quantum computers Entangled states In part two Ian covers: Where does the quantum view of the world end and our classical view start? John Von Neumann (mathematician) Eugene Wigner physicist Descartes: dualism of mind and brain Time as an illusion (Einstein) Donald Hoffman’s reality “user interface” hypothesis Roger Penrose’s model of consciousness Kurt Gödel The philosophical idea of Plato’s cave The Church-Turing hypothesis Henry Stack (theoretical physicist) & his theory of quantum consciousness The quantum zeno effect Concrescence of particles Relativistic quantum theory How all this might reflect in dowsing Amit Goswami's view of the self aware universe: to be continued and expanded upon in future videos.