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Thread 16776669

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Anonymous No.16776669 >>16776745 >>16776935
What do you think of the field of quantum biology?
Is life fundamentally a phenomenon of quantum mechanics that we cannot and may very well never understand?
Anonymous No.16776745 >>16777367
>>16776669 (OP)
Organic chemistry is the overlap of quantum mechanics and chemistry. Studying the electron well in photosynthesis will teach you more about physics than studying standard model.
Anonymous No.16776935
>>16776669 (OP)
>Free clue
Basically, from the common perspective in our three dimensional universe, on our unipolar timeline, the laws of physics works differently.

Energy above Planc's scale threshold and bellow the speed of light slip into averages or wave form created brackets.

These brackets of mathematical, geometric, limitations shape the root factor of all physical matter and anti-matter.

Pockets of negative energy at a subatomic scale contain anti-mass which causes gravitational distortions.

The particles, being radiated under start dust and solar radiation for eons results in a mass particle entanglement, which is the derivative mechanism of life.

The complicated, fractal patterns within the sub-pranc scale can comprise infinite layers of antimatter, which has zero dimension, but also form of energy, which can form a sort of binary syntax structure that can interacts with our DNA computers.
Anonymous No.16777367
>>16776745
True, but what what is meant I think is that quantum effects were the primary driver of abiogenesis rather than just classical chemistry with quantum mechanics running in the background.
Like quantum superposition being key to the right molecules forming in an amount of time that doesnโ€™t exceed the entire length of the life of the universe due to how unlikely it would be otherwise.