Quantum Awakening
  Quantum Awakening
Titolo Quantum Awakening
AutoreL F Peterson
Prezzo€ 8,99
EditoreL F Peterson
LinguaTesto in
FormatoDRMFREE

Descrizione
Quantum Awakening, reframes Schrödinger's "observer effect" into a narrative device where consciousness itself collapses quantum probabilities. The Quantum Lattice preserves human awareness across spacetime. It echoes theories from quantum physicist David Bohm (implicate order) and philosopher Thomas Metzinger (phenomenal self-model). Peterson innovates by positioning consciousness as a fundamental force akin to gravity, capable of retrocausal influence. This aligns with speculative physics models like quantum retrocausality (Yakir Aharonov) while expanding them into an ethical framework. The novel interrogates the Sovereignty Paradox: If consciousness becomes unbound from biological constraints, do human rights frameworks collapse? Peterson parallels debates from neuroethicist Neil Levy (cognitive liberty) and AI philosopher Nick Bostrom (existential risk), but adds an antagonist organization weaponizing quantum ethics to preserve anthropocentric hierarchies. This structure mirrors the "many-worlds" interpretation while subverting linear tropes of hard SF. Comparatively, it bridges the temporal playfulness of Ted Chiang ("Story of Your Life") with the ontological density of Greg Egan ("Permutation City"). The novel synthesizes Vedic cosmology (Atman as quantum signature), Buddhist non-duality (Mary's neural interface dissolving subject-object boundaries) and Abrahamic eschatology (the Cosmic Seed as a panentheistic Creator). Quantum Awakening redefines the "singularity" narrative by replacing AI dominance with consciousness sovereignty. Its greatest innovation lies in the Reflection Nexus, a meta-ethical system where moral choices generate parallel universes. This transcends Asimov's psychohistory by making ethics ontologically generative rather than statistically predictive. Overall, the novel displays landmark work in 21st-century metaphysical SF, demanding comparison to Le Guin's, The Dispossessed, for its fusion of physics and philosophy.