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Quantum Quotes

Quotes tagged as "quantum" Showing 1-30 of 282
Werner Heisenberg
“Not only is the Universe stranger than we think, it is stranger than we can think.”
Werner Heisenberg, Across the Frontiers

Niels Bohr
“Those who are not shocked when they first come across quantum theory cannot possibly have understood it.”
Niels Bohr, Essays 1932-1957 on Atomic Physics and Human Knowledge

Gabriel F.W. Koch
“The created a displacement devise that separated solids into fragmented molecules.”
Gabriel F.W. Koch, Steel Blood

Kenneth Schmitt
“To know our true essence, we need to leave all of the energy of low vibrations out of our consciousness. We must withdraw all of our life force from that realm, because it is parasitic. It has little life force of its own and cannot exist unless we give it life through our attention, imagination and emotions.”
Kenneth Schmitt, Quantum Energetics and Spirituality Volume 1: Aligning with Universal Consciousness

Gabriel F.W. Koch
“Only human after all, she whispered.”
Gabriel F.W. Koch, Steel Blood

Vera Nazarian
“Today is an ephemeral ghost...

A strange amazing day that comes only once every four years. For the rest of the time it does not "exist."

In mundane terms, it marks a "leap" in time, when the calendar is adjusted to make up for extra seconds accumulated over the preceding three years due to the rotation of the earth. A day of temporal tune up!

But this day holds another secret—it contains one of those truly rare moments of delightful transience and light uncertainty that only exist on the razor edge of things, along a buzzing plane of quantum probability...

A day of unlocked potential.

Will you or won't you? Should you or shouldn't you?

Use this day to do something daring, extraordinary and unlike yourself. Take a chance and shape a different pattern in your personal cloud of probability!”
Vera Nazarian, The Perpetual Calendar of Inspiration

“Listen, O lord of the meeting rivers,
things standing shall fall,
but the moving ever shall stay.”
Basava, The lord of the meeting rivers: Devotional poems of Basavaṇṇa

Abhaidev
“I believed my love would be reciprocated because it was pure. But it wasn’t. Reaction to every action? It doesn’t work that way with a human heart. Human mind resembles the quantum world. Always uncertain. Beyond any explanation.”
Abhaidev, That Thing About You

“After Elsa’s death, Einstein established a routine that as the years passed varied less and less. Breakfast between 9 and 10 was followed by a walk to the institute. After working until 1pm he would return home for lunch and a nap. Afterwards he would work in his study until dinner between 6.30 and 7pm. If not entertaining guests, he would return to work until he went to bed between 11 and 12. He rarely went to the theatre or to a concert, and unlike Bohr, hardly ever watched a movie. He was, Einstein said in 1936, ‘living in the kind of solitude that is painful in one’s youth but in one’s more mature years is delicious’.”
Manjit Kumar, Quantum: Einstein, Bohr and the Great Debate About the Nature of Reality

Victor J. Stenger
“The myth of quantum consciousness sits well with many whose egos have made it impossible for them to accept the insignificant place science perceives for humanity, as modern instruments probe the farthest reaches of space and time. ... quantum consciousness has about as much substance as the aether from which it is composed. Early in this century, quantum mechanics and Einstein’s relativity destroyed the notion of a holistic universe that had seemed within the realm of possibility in the century just past. First, Einstein did away with the aether, shattering the doctrine that we all move about inside a universal, cosmic fluid whose excitations connect us simultaneously to one another and to the rest of the universe. Second, Einstein and other physicists proved that matter and light were composed of particles, wiping away the notion of universal continuity. Atomic theory and quantum mechanics demonstrated that everything, even space and time, exists in discrete bits – quanta. To turn this around and say that twentieth century physics initiated some new holistic view of the universe is a complete misrepresentation of what actually took place. ... The myth of quantum consciousness should take its place along with gods, unicorns, and dragons as yet another product of the fantasies of people unwilling to accept what science, reason, and their own eyes tell them about the world.”
Victor J. Stenger

Quantum physics teaches us that we can simultaneously exist in many places, under certain conditions.
“Quantum physics teaches us that we can simultaneously exist in many places, under certain conditions.”
Amit Ray, Quantum Computing Algorithms for Artificial Intelligence

Mahmud Shabistari
“Know the world from end to end is a mirror;
in each atom a hundred suns are concealed.
If you pierce the heart of a single drop of water,
from it will flow a hundred clear oceans;
if you look intently at each speck of dust,
in it you will see a thousand beings.
A gnat in its limbs is like an elephant;
in name a drop of water resembles the Nile.
In the heart of a barleycorn is stored a hundred harvests.
Within a millet-seed a world exists.
In an insects wing is an ocean of life.
A heaven is concealed in the pupil of an eye.
The core at the center of the heart is small,
yet the Lord of both worlds will enter there.”
Mahmud Shabistari

Sol Luckman
“Atoms, the building blocks of so-called matter, however much they might seem to be physically circumscribed, aren’t actually like tiny billiard balls. That’s kindergarten science.

From a shamanic or alchemical perspective, atoms are
more like sentient waves, their intelligently responsive
existence a blur of potential until they magically appear to materialize.”
Sol Luckman, Get Out of Here Alive: Inner Alchemy & Immortality

Maria Karvouni
“If we parallelize quantum mechanics with reality, then we should consider more information than what we perceive as probable and as reality.”
Maria Karvouni, Reality Is Just A Possible Fantasy

Sol Luckman
“Contrary to the dogma downloaded from our many cult-like institutions of higher (actually lower) learning, we’re not in any way separate from the quantum dance of the imagination; we’re inextricably bound up in it. In a mind-melting paradox, we somehow manage to give rise to the quantum dance … even as it dances us!”
Sol Luckman, Get Out of Here Alive: Inner Alchemy & Immortality

Sol Luckman
“A critical piece of holistic self-becoming involves the deeply felt realization that our thoughts, beliefs and intentions aren’t merely mental or ‘just imaginary’ events. On the contrary, they’re potent forces interacting synergistically with the quantum field, the biofield of the Universal Mind, if you will.

In a culture crafted by eager yes-men and -women to an overbearing materialism, this may be a hard pill to swallow. But that doesn’t change this clear (to many anyway) dynamic: the simply powerful act of observation influences the universe at its most basic level.”
Sol Luckman, Get Out of Here Alive: Inner Alchemy & Immortality

Sol Luckman
“To be or not to be? Is that really the question? Or should it be: To dance or not to dance?

Dancing is being in this quantum disco we call reality. So what does that make not dancing?”
Sol Luckman, Get Out of Here Alive: Inner Alchemy & Immortality

“In the Mridha Energy Theory of Consciousness (METC), consciousness (

Debasish Mridha M.D.

“Quantum computers won't solve humanity's problems, but they might calculate humanity's hardest calculations in hours instead of millennia.”
Ludmila Morozova-Buss

“Quantum thinking dissolves the illusion of fixed systems.”
Ludmila Morozova-Buss

“Quantum is not only physics. It is a new way of understanding reality.”
Ludmila Morozova-Buss

“Unlike classical certainty, quantum systems describe likelihoods, not fixed outcomes.”
Ludmila Morozova-Buss

“In life, like in the quantum realm, the hidden cost of doing nothing ends the moment you do something. Anything. However small. However imperfect. You don't need the whole leap. Just the twitch that breaks the stillness. What is the smallest observable motion you could make today?”
Ludmila Morozova-Buss

“The quantum revolution is not the discovery of quantum physics. It is the transition from understanding quantum reality to engineering it.”
Ludmila Morozova-Buss

“Quantum Technology Is No Longer Theoretical.



The underlying effects were never absent. Superposition, entanglement, and quantum tunnelling have been present in every physical system since the universe first permitted stable atomic structure. What has changed is not physics itself. What has shifted is not the existence of these effects, but the mode of engagement from passive description to active, reproducible engineering.”
Ludmila Morozova-Buss

“Quantum Technology Is No Longer Theoretical

The quantum revolution is not the discovery of quantum physics. It is the transition from understanding quantum reality to engineering it.

The underlying effects were never absent. Superposition, entanglement, and quantum tunnelling have been present in every physical system since the universe first permitted stable atomic structure. What has changed is not physics itself. What has shifted is not the existence of these effects, but the mode of engagement from passive description to active, reproducible engineering.

By 2026, three transitions have moved quantum behaviour from the domain of theory into the domain of operational technology:

First, quantum sensors have moved beyond laboratory demonstrations. They now resolve subterranean voids, neural magnetic fields, and gravitational gradients with a precision that lies beyond the fundamental noise limits of classical devices. Atomic interferometers, quantum magnetometers, and optical lattice clocks now operate in real environments, achieving measurement precision approaching fundamental quantum limits. Applications range from geophysical surveying and navigation without GPS to biomedical magnetic sensing. These instruments are deployed in the field, not confined to laboratory optics.

Second, quantum communication is operational. Quantum key distribution networks carry commercial and governmental traffic under security guarantees derived from physical law - no-cloning and entanglement monogamy. Not from conjectured computational hardness.

Third, Prototype quantum processors have executed specific sampling tasks whose classical simulation would exceed the capacity of any existing supercomputer, thereby delivering a measurable, problem-specific computational advantage. These systems do not yet replace classical computing, but they establish an essential fact: engineered quantum devices can outperform classical machines in well-defined regimes.

These facts do not imply that quantum reality has been “decrypted.” Gödelian incompleteness still hovers over any formal system rich enough to encode its own measurement problem. The interpretation of the wavefunction remains open, and foundational questions persist. Yet a complete interpretive closure is not a prerequisite for measurable, engineering-grade performance. The technological maturity does not wait for interpretive consensus. It arrived ahead of the philosophical resolution. As it often has throughout scientific history.

For strategists, investors, and technology leaders, who classified quantum as long-horizon abstracta, the timeline has compressed. The appropriate question is not whether quantum effects are real. That was established. It is an emerging engineering domain with measurable performance, published benchmarks, and operational deployments. The appropriate question is whether the roadmap accounts for the fact that devices built on these effects now outperform classical equivalents in specific, published, peer-reviewed measurement regimes.

Mathematics does not respond to hype. Mathematics also does not lie when error bars shrink and p-values approach zero. The technology is operational. The record is in the journals.”
Ludmila Morozova-Buss

“Nature has been engineering quantum effects at scale for 13.8 billion years. The Sun is the prime exhibit. It is the ultimate proof that quantum coherence is not a fragile laboratory curiosity but a physically exploitable resource. So exploitable that it can power a star and all its orbiting biospheres.”
Ludmila Morozova-Buss

“In a single century, quantum physics performed an extraordinary inversion. Uncertainty, once the enemy of the knowledge, became the engine of creation. Superposition transformed "either/or" into "all at once." Entanglement ended the tyranny of distance. The quantum field revealed that to engineer reality is not to eliminate possibility. It is to orchestrate it. Certainty was never a goal. Coherence is.”
Ludmila Morozova-Buss, Ph.D.

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