[Please note that the views presented by individual contributors 
          are not necessarily representative of the views of ATCA, which is neutral. 
          ATCA conducts collective Socratic dialogue on global opportunities and 
          threats.]
        Within Holistic Quantum Relativity lies the realm of the human mind 
          and the observable universe running like Quantum Computers: this technological 
          synthesis offers the possibility of solving what computer science calls 
          "NP-complete" problems. Last week D-Wave Systems, a privately-held 
          Canadian firm Headquartered near Vancouver, BC, demonstrated what it 
          calls the world's first commercially viable Quantum Computer at the 
          Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California. These are problems 
          which are impossible or nearly impossible to calculate on a classical 
          digital computer. Picking out a single pattern from a collection of 
          patterns, such as one's mother, father, or child, from a photo of people, 
          is easy for the human mind, but beyond the reach of a conventional desk-top 
          computer! 
        The key step in quantum computing is to harness the entanglement of 
          different particles -- what Albert Einstein called the "spooky 
          action at a distance" -- that allows one particle to affect another 
          somewhere else. Orion of D-Wave Systems does this by using rings of 
          current flowing through superconductors. The current can flow clockwise, 
          counter clockwise or, significantly, both directions at once, allowing 
          it to hold two values simultaneously due to quantum mechanical strangeness.
        Last week, Canadian company D-Wave Systems demonstrated a 16-qubit, 
          specific-purpose quantum computer to a room packed with observers and 
          thick with doubt and awe. Reporters watched as the machine solved a 
          Sudoku puzzle and a seating arrangements problem, and, most impressively, 
          searched for molecules similar to the drug Prilosec from a database 
          of molecules.
        The machine is programmed by changing the magnetic conditions around 
          quantum bits, or "qubits," creating relationships between 
          them that model the physical embodiment of the equation the programmer 
          is trying to solve. The results are read by detecting the direction 
          of the current within the qubit when the calculations are complete.
        But significant challenges confront D-Wave in building a useful quantum 
          computer. A key part of making a practical machine will be error correction 
          -- something Orion doesn't do yet, and which requires many more qubits 
          than are currently feasible. Right now, Orion runs its calculations 
          multiple times and determines which answer has the highest probability 
          of being right.
        Moreover, scaling up a quantum computer might cause it to lose "coherence," 
          ie the entanglement of a distant particle might fail when you introduce 
          too many qubits. Nobody's certain. Finally, engineering the whole system 
          to be fast enough for practical use and modular enough to deploy at 
          a customer's site remain daunting problems, even if the laws of Quantum 
          Mechanics decide to play along.
        Quantum computing offers the potential to create value in areas where 
          problems or requirements exceed the capability of digital computing. 
          But D-Wave notes that its new device is intended as a complement to 
          conventional computers, not as a replacement for them. The demo aimed 
          to show how the machine can run commercial applications and solve problems 
          that severely challenge conventional (digital) computers. 
        Although many scientists believe that quantum computing may be many 
          years from reality, D-Wave intends to offer its technology for sale 
          next year. It's no surprise, then, that D-Wave's event caused quite 
          a stir and caught the attention of journalists from a wide range of 
          media outlets. 
        Primer on Quantum Computing
        Quantum computers (QCs) use quantum mechanics (QM), the rules that 
          underlie the behaviour of matter and energy in the physical world and 
          observable universe, to accelerate computation. It has been known for 
          some time that once some simple features of QM are harnessed, machines 
          will be built capable of outperforming any conceivable conventional 
          supercomputer.
        QCs are not just faster than conventional computers. They change what 
          computer scientists call the computational scaling of many problems.
        In 1936, mathematician Alan Turing published a famous paper that addressed 
          the problem of computability. His thesis was that all computers were 
          equivalent, and could all be simulated by each other. By extension, 
          a problem was either computable or not, regardless of what computer 
          it was run on. This paper led to the concept of the Universal Turing 
          Machine, an idealized model of a computer to which all computers are 
          equivalent.
        We now know that Turing was only partially correct. Not all computers 
          are equivalent. His work was based on an assumption - that computation 
          and information were abstract entities, divorced from the rules of physics 
          governing the behaviour of the computer itself.
        One of the most important developments in modern science is the realization 
          that information (and computation) can never exist in the abstract. 
          Information is always tied to the physical stuff upon which it is written. 
          What is possible to compute is completely determined by the rules of 
          physics.
        Turing's work, and conventional computer science, are only valid if 
          a computer obeys the rules of Newtonian physics - the set of rules that 
          apply to large and hot things, like baseballs and humans. If elements 
          of a computer behave according to different rules, such as the rules 
          of QM, this assumption fails and many very interesting possibilities 
          emerge.
        As an example, consider the modelling of a nanosized structure, such 
          as a drug molecule, using conventional (ie, non-quantum) computers. 
          Solving the Schrödinger Equation (SE), the fundamental description 
          of matter at the QM level, more than doubles in difficulty for every 
          electron in the molecule. This is called exponential scaling, and prohibits 
          solution of the SE for systems greater than about 30 electrons. A single 
          caffeine molecule has more than 100 electrons, making it roughly 100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000, 
          000,000,000,000,000 times harder to solve than a 30-electron system, 
          which itself makes even high-end supercomputers choke.
        This restriction makes first-principles modelling of molecular structures 
          impossible, and has historically defined the boundary between physics 
          (where the SE can be solved by brute force) and chemistry (where it 
          cannot, and empirical modelling and human creativity must take over).
        Quantum computers are capable of solving the SE with linear scaling 
          exponentially faster and with exponentially less hardware than conventional 
          computers. For a QC, the difficulty in solving the SE increases by a 
          small, fixed amount for every electron in a system. Even very primitive 
          QCs will be able to outperform supercomputers in simulating nature.
        Even more significant, as QC technology matures, systems containing 
          hundreds, thousands, even millions of electrons will be able to be modelled 
          by the direct, brute force solution of the SE. This means that the fundamental 
          equations of nature will be solvable for all nanoscale systems, with 
          no approximations and no fudge factors. Results of these virtual reality 
          simulations will be indistinguishable from what is seen in the real 
          world, assuming that QM is an accurate picture of nature.
        This type of simulation, by direct solution of the fundamental laws 
          of nature, will become the backbone of engineering design in the nanotech 
          regime where quantum mechanics reigns.
        Does Quantum Computing have a future? 
        Excerpts of Interview with Prof David Deutsch, Father of QC, by 
          Wired News
        To cut through the fog, Wired News sought out the father of Quantum 
          Computing, Oxford University theoretical physicist Prof David Deutsch. 
          Prof Deutsch is a leading proponent of the theory of Quantum Computing. 
          Wired News pulled him away from dinner to talk about what a quantum 
          computer really is, what it's good for and what D-Wave's announcement 
          might mean for the future.
        Wired News (WN): D-Wave announced 16 qubits, and they want people to 
          play with them, so they're talking about having a web API where people 
          can try to port their own applications and see how it works. Do you 
          think that's a good approach to gaining some acceptability and mind 
          share for the idea of quantum computing?
        David Deutsch: I think the field doesn't need acceptability. The idea 
          will either be valid, or not. The claim will either be true, or not. 
          I think that the normal processes of scientific criticism, peer review 
          and just general discussion in the scientific community is going to 
          test this idea -- provided enough information is given of what this 
          idea is. That will be quite independent of what kind of access they 
          provide to the public.
        However, I think the idea of providing an interface such as you describe 
          is a very good one. I think it's a wonderful idea....
        WN: Can you give a couple of examples of what kind of things can be 
          done with quantum computing that either can't be done, or can't be done 
          practically, with classical computing?
        Deutsch: The most important application of quantum computing in the 
          future is likely to be a computer simulation of quantum systems, because 
          that's an application where we know for sure that quantum systems in 
          general cannot be efficiently simulated on a classical computer. This 
          is an application where the quantum computer is ideally suited.
        Perhaps in the long run, as nanotechnology becomes quantum technology, 
          that will be a very important generic application.
        Another thing I should say is, that application is the only one of 
          the major applications -- apart from quantum cryptography, by the way, 
          which is already implemented and is really in a different category -- 
          that might be amenable to a non-general purpose quantum computer. That 
          is to say, a special-purpose quantum computer.
        WN: Can you talk a little about the importance of simulating quantum 
          systems, and give an example?
        Deutsch: Yes. Whenever we design a complex piece of technology we need 
          to simulate it, either in theory by working out the equations that govern 
          it, or as a computer simulation, by running a program on the computer 
          whose motion mimics that of the real system.
        But when we come to designing quantum systems, we're going to have 
          to simulate the behaviour of quantum super positions, which is, in Many 
          Universes terms, when an object is doing different things in different 
          universes. On a classical computer you'd have to work out what every 
          single one of those was, and then combine them in the end with the equations 
          governing quantum interference.
        WN: And that becomes computationally impossible?
        Deutsch: That becomes infeasible very, very quickly, once you've got 
          more than three, four, five particles involved, whereas a quantum computer 
          could mimic such a process directly by itself doing that number of computations 
          simultaneously in different universes. So it is naturally adapted to 
          that kind of simulation, if we wanted to work out, let's say, the exactly 
          properties of a given molecule.
        Some people have suggested this might be useful for designing new drugs, 
          but we don't know if that's the case or not. Although quantum processes 
          are needed in general for atomic and molecular scale properties, not 
          all of them (need quantum processes). An example of that is we've been 
          able to do a lot of biotechnology without having any quantum simulators.
        WN: Do you think a quantum computer could eventually build a slightly 
          more macro simulation, something like an immune system, in order to 
          see how it interacts with a drug?
        Deutsch: No, that's not what it would be used for. It would be used 
          for smaller things, not things on a larger scale than a molecule, but 
          things on a smaller scale. Small molecules and interactions within an 
          atom, subtle differences between different isotopes, that sort of thing. 
          And of course things on an even smaller scale than that. Nuclear physics, 
          and also artificial, atomic-sized things which will be used in nanotechnology.
        Of which at the moment the only ones planned are quantum computers. 
          Of course quantum computer designing other quantum computers is undoubtedly 
          going to be one of the applications.
        WN: The other field I can see ... this revolutionizing is materials 
          science.
        Deutsch: Yes, yes. Again we don't know how revolutionary it will be, 
          but certainly on the small scale, it will be indispensable.
        WN: What would you like to see the field trying to do?
        Deutsch: I'm probably the wrong person to ask that because my own interest 
          in this field is not really technological. To me quantum computation 
          is a new and deeper and better way to understand the laws of physics, 
          and hence understanding physical reality as a whole. We are really only 
          scratching the surface of what it is telling us about the nature of 
          the laws of physics. That's the kind of direction that I'm pursuing.
        The pleasant thing about that is that can be done before one even makes 
          a quantum computer. The theoretical conclusions are already there, and 
          we can work on them already. It's not that I don't think technological 
          applications are important, but I watch them as an eager spectator rather 
          than participant.
        WN: For your purposes, the importance of quantum computing is in the 
          general case more than in the specific-use case.
        Deutsch: Yes. The fact that the laws of physics permit themselves to 
          be simulated by a quantum computer is a deep fact about the nature of 
          the universe that we will have to understand more deeply in the future.
        WN: How do you think using quantum computers will change how people 
          think about computing, and consequently the universe and nature?
        Deutsch: "How they will think about it" is the relevant phrase 
          here. This is a philosophical and psychological question you're asking. 
          You're not asking a question about the physics or the logic of the situation.
        I think that when universal quantum computers are finally achieved 
          technologically, and when they are routinely performing computations 
          where there is simply more going on there than a classical computer 
          or even the whole universe acting as a computer could possibly achieve, 
          then people will get very impatient and bored, I think, with attempts 
          to say that those computations don't really happen, and that the equations 
          of quantum mechanics are merely ways of expressing what the answer would 
          be but not how it was obtained.
        The programmers will know perfectly well how it was obtained, and they 
          will have programmed the steps that will have obtained it. The fact 
          that answers are obtained from a quantum computer that couldn't be obtained 
          any other way will make people take seriously that the process that 
          obtained them was objectively real.
        Nothing more than that is needed to lead to the conclusion that there 
          are parallel universes, because that is specifically how quantum computers 
          work.
        WN: So what prompted you to start thinking about quantum computing?
        Deutsch: This goes back a long way before I even thought of general 
          purpose quantum computing. I was thinking about the relationship between 
          computing and physics.... This was back in the 1970s....
        It had been said, ever since the parallel universes theory had been 
          invented by Everett in the 1950s, that there's no experimental difference 
          between it and the various (theories), like the Copenhagen interpretation, 
          that try to deny that all but one of the universes exist.
        Although it had been taken for granted that there was no experimental 
          difference, in fact, there is -- provided the observer can be analyzed 
          as part of the quantum system. But you can only do that if the observer 
          is implemented on quantum hardware, so I postulated this quantum hardware 
          that was running an artificial intelligence program, and as a result 
          was able to concoct an experiment which would give one output from an 
          observer's point of view if the parallel universes theory was true, 
          and a different outcome if only a single universe existed.
        This device that I postulated is what we would now call a quantum computer, 
          but because I wasn't particularly thinking about computers, I didn't 
          call it that, and I didn't really start thinking about quantum computation 
          as a process until several years later. That lead to my suggesting the 
          universal quantum computer and proving its properties in the mid-'80s.
        WN: How many qubits (does it take) to make the general-purpose quantum 
          computer useful?
        Deutsch: I think the watershed moment with quantum computer technology 
          will be when a quantum computer -- a universal quantum computer -- exceeds 
          about 100 to 200 qubits.
        Now when I say qubits, I have to stress that the term qubit hasn't 
          got a very precise definition at the moment, and I've been arguing for 
          a long time that the physics community ought to get together and decide 
          on some criteria for different senses for the word qubit. What I mean 
          here is a qubit which is capable of being in any quantum state, and 
          is capable of undergoing any kind of entanglement with another qubit 
          of the same technology, and all those conditions are actually necessary 
          to make a fully fledged quantum computer.
        If you relax any one of the those conditions it's much easier to implement 
          in physics. For instance, if you call something a qubit but it can only 
          be entangled with qubits of a different technology, then it's much easier 
          to build. But of course a thing like that can't be made part of a computer 
          memory. (With) computer memory you need lots of identical ones.
        There's also the question of error correction. The one physical qubit 
          is probably not enough to act as a qubit in genuine quantum computation, 
          because of the problem of errors and decoherence. So you need to implement 
          quantum error correction, and quantum error correction is going to require 
          several physical qubits for every logical qubit of the computer. When 
          I said you need 100 to 200, that probably means several hundred, or 
          perhaps 1,000 or more, physical qubits.
        WN: To get an effective 100 or 200 qubits.
        Deutsch: Yes, and that is what would have to count as the watershed 
          for quantum computation, for being a distinctive new technology with 
          its own genuine uses.
        WN: That's actually D-Wave's stated goal as well: essentially 1,000 
          qubits in two years. Do you think engineering-wise, and this is not 
          completely within your realm, they will be able to maintain enough coherence 
          at that level to create a practical computer.
        Deutsch: As you said that really isn't my field. Maintaining coherence 
          itself isn't quite enough. They've got to maintain coherence in the 
          operation that I spoke of; that is, the arbitrary superposition, the 
          arbitrary entanglement, and so on....
        I don't know. The technologies I've seen so far have got way fewer 
          than 1,000. They've got way fewer than 16. I always have to ask whether 
          the claimed number of qubits are qubits that I would count as qubits 
          by these stringent criteria, or whether it's merely two-state systems 
          that can in some sense act in a quantum way. Because that's a much more 
          lenient criterion.
        WN: I don't have the sophistication to answer that, for D-Wave at least. 
          If I were to ask you to cast your mind forward, saying everything goes 
          well, what does a world that combines ubiquitous quantum computing and 
          classical computing look like? And you've said that quantum computing 
          would never replace classical computing.
        Deutsch: It's not anywhere near as big a revolution as, say, the internet, 
          or the introduction of computers in the first place. The practical application, 
          from a ordinary consumer's point of view, are just quantitative.
        One field that will be revolutionized is cryptography. All, or nearly 
          all, existing cryptographic systems will be rendered insecure, and even 
          retrospectively insecure, in that messages sent today, if somebody keeps 
          them, will be possible to decipher ... with a quantum computer as soon 
          as one is built.
        Most fields won't be revolutionized in that way.
        Fortunately, the already existing technology of quantum cryptography 
          is not only more secure than any existing classical system, but it's 
          invulnerable to attack by a quantum computer. Anyone who cares sufficiently 
          much about security ought to be instituting quantum cryptography wherever 
          it's technically feasible.
        Apart from that, as I said, mathematical operations will become easier. 
          Algorithmic search is the most important one, I think. Computers will 
          become a little bit faster, especially in certain applications. Simulating 
          quantum systems will become important because quantum technology will 
          become important generally, in the form of nanotechnology.
        WN: If we have practical nanotechnology, I imagine that's a huge change.
        Deutsch: Nanotechnology has the potential of making a huge change. 
          But the only involvement of quantum computers is that it will make it 
          easier to design nanotechnological devices. Apart from that I don't 
          think it's a big technological revolution.
        What it is though, philosophically, is taking a quantum world view. 
          That is rather a revolution, but that could happen today and the only 
          reason it has been sluggish in happening is psychological, and maybe 
          quantum computers will help with this psychological process. That's 
          a very indirect phenomenon.
        WN: It does allow people to play with it, and they often get things 
          better when they play with them.
        Deutsch: That's true.
        WN: I wanted to ask you to describe your book a bit.
        Deutsch: You'll remember I said for me the most important thing about 
          quantum computation is the way it shows us the deep connections between 
          physics on the one hand and computation on the other, which were previously 
          suspected by only a few pioneers like Rolf Landauer of IBM.
        My book [The Fabric of Reality] is about this connection between computation 
          and fundamental physics, between those two apparently unconnected fields.... 
          To me, (that connection is) part of a wider thing, where there are also 
          two other strands, the theory of knowledge and the theory of evolution. 
          The Fabric of Reality is my attempt to say that a world view formed 
          out of those four strands is the deepest knowledge that we currently 
          have about the world.
        [ENDS]
        Sceptics point out, though, that D-Wave has not published its work 
          in peer-reviewed journals yet. So doubts abound concerning whether the 
          company is demonstrating true quantum computing. Perhaps that is why, 
          D-Wave's CEO Herb Martin has emphasized that the Orion machine is "not 
          a true quantum computer and is instead a kind of special-purpose machine 
          that uses some quantum mechanics to solve problems." Meantime D-Wave 
          plans to answer doubters by offering a Web-based interface that allows 
          people to try out the technology on their own applications. 
        Holistic Quantum Relativity Background
        For those who wish to understand the genesis of this Socratic Dialogue 
          on IntentBlog, which has led to the preliminary efforts towards Holistic 
          Quantum Relativity (HQR), please visit the following strings in sequence:
        1. Maulana 
          Rumi: 2007 is his 800th Anniversary!
        2. Unified 
          Force, Sub-nuclear Physics & Love of Rumi
        3. Holistics: 
          Embracing Science, Art and Spirituality!
        4. Complex 
          Holistics: Hegel's Logic, Spirit and Mind
        5. Simple 
          Holistics: Hegel Triangles & Unified Pyramid
        6. Holistic 
          Pyramid, Sahasrara, Sri Yantra, Creation
        7. Holistic 
          Relativity: Spiritual Planes & Consciousness
        8. Holistic 
          Quantum Relativity: Spirituality and Science
        9. Holistic 
          Quantum Relativity Project: Glossary
        10. Holistic 
          Quantum Relativity Evolution on IntentBlog 
        11. HQR: 
          Tagore Einstein: Science, Spirituality & Music
        12. HQR: 
          Albert Einstein Quotes on Spirituality
        13. HQR: 
          HH Master Kirpal -- Nature of Thought
        14. HQR: 
          HH Master Kirpal -- Indira Gandhi & Quotes
        15. HQR: 
          Quantum Physics -- The Holotropic State
        16. HQR: 
          Bringing All Together & Another Perspective
        Similar information in a more accessible format is available from The 
          Alliance for a New Humanity's Global Wiki Project
        This is presented as an amalgam from a number of sources with attendant 
          errors and omissions. 
        
        [ENDS]
          
        
         
           
             
              We look forward to your further thoughts, observations and views. 
                Thank you.
              Best wishes
              
                For and on behalf of DK Matai, Chairman, Asymmetric Threats Contingency 
                Alliance (ATCA)