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Why Jordan Peterson Will Be A Big Hit At Bitcoin 2022 – Bitcoin Magazine

World-renowned Canadian author and psychologist Dr. Jordan Peterson will be on stage at Bitcoin 2022 in Miami April 6-9, causing speculation that he may be planning a public endorsement of bitcoin in a city that prides itself on being friendly towards bitcoin, and other cryptocurrency-related industry and adoption.

Peterson has become wildly popular in recent years with millions of views on his YouTube podcast and millions of sales worldwide of his self-help book 12 Rules For Life. An Antidote To Chaos.

A highlight of the Miami conference, Peterson is causing excitement and a certain amount of surprise as he has expressed an interest in bitcoin in the past, but has not been a regular on the Bitcoin front lines.

Francis Pouliot, CEO and founder of Canadas largest noncustodial exchange Bull Bitcoin has been a fan of Petersons since 2018, and included his book 12 Rules For Life in his picks for the top three books of 2018:

Pouliot is seeing an accelerating interest in bitcoin in Canada, likely in part because of what he calls the out-of-control financial censorship that culminated in the Emergencies Act to suppress the Freedom Convoy protests by Canadian truckers, as well as the Bank of Canada's dramatic increase in money printing.

Pouliot told Bitcoin Magazine that he sees the orange-pilling of Jordan Peterson as being perfectly representative of this new wave of bitcoin adoption.

A growing constituency of Canadians, including within the traditional business establishments, realize that banking and government institutions do not have their best interest at heart, he said.

As they look for solutions to mitigate inflation and political uncertainty, Bitcoin stands out as the only credible alternative to the fiat system. Given the gravity of this rapidly deteriorating situation, they are now willing to give Bitcoin a shot, he added.

Jordan Peterson - what is the attraction? He is credited with tens of millions of cumulative views from all around the world on his YouTube podcast.

Why do young people in particular Generations X and Z, and mainly young men follow a boomer professor emeritus from Canadas University of Toronto?

In her article in The Atlantic, Why the Left Is So Afraid Of Jordan Peterson, author Caitlin Flanagan says:

The Canadian psychology professors stardom is evidence that leftism is on the decline and deeply vulnerable.

Flanagan sees Peterson as occupying an intellectual niche all his own that is not conservative (although often characterized as such), not liberal and outside the overwhelmingly dominant politically-correct ethos found in academia today.

Young men particularly are getting what she calls the only sustained argument against identity politics.

With identity politics off the table, it was possible to talk about all kinds of things religion, philosophy, history, myth in a different way. They could have a direct experience with ideas, not one mediated by ideology, she added.

Peterson has been a source of controversy (here a message from a Kitchener, Ontario transgender group) over the use of gender nouns and pronouns and what he sees as a move away from free speech in Canada.

Francis Pouliot is a big fan of free speech and is thrilled that Peterson, another free speech advocate, will be attending whats looking to be the largest Bitcoin event ever held with an estimated 20,000 in attendance.

I am extremely stoked that Jordan Peterson is coming to Bitcoin 2022, he told us.

Like many other Bitcoin professionals, Dr. Peterson's teachings about personal responsibility have had a profound positive effect on my life and I consider them to be a perfect complement to the Bitcoin ethos of self-sovereignty.

Peterson is currently campaigning against an Ontario proposed law that will require critical race theory to be taught in public schools in Ontario.

Peterson has been a thoughtful observer of Bitcoin but his priorities have mainly been with his clinical psychology practice.

In his podcast with John Vallis Bitcoiner book club in August 2021, Peterson asked the four Bitcoiners many of the right questions giving listeners one of the best insights into the workings of a Bitcoiners mind.

In November 2021, Peterson interviewed Dr. Saifedean Amous, author of The Bitcoin Standard and he was clearly still learning about Bitcoin. He is especially impressed that Bitcoin can be kept completely out of the hands of governments.

What will Peterson have to say on April 8 at 12:30 pm?

Bitcoin Magazine will be covering the event both in print and on livestream.

This wet plate collodion photo of Peterson with lobster, The Lobster Analogy," taken by Shane Balkowitsch, highlights the importance of the lobster as a symbol of the drive for dominance in 12 Rules For Life: An Antidote To Chaos.

Jordan Peterson (here with wife Tammy) is currently on a tour of the U.S., Europe and Canada including 52 cities in North America and a further 16 dates in Scandinavia, the Balkans, and the U.K.

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Marxist Penn State associate professor wished for the deaths of Donald Trump, Jordan Peterson, Ben Shapiro, and more – TheBlaze

A Penn State associate professor allegedly hoped for the deaths of prominent conservative voices, including former President Donald Trump, Jordan Peterson, and Ben Shapiro.

The Post Millennial editor-at-large Andy Ngo shared alleged screenshots of alarming tweets sent by Zack Furness a Penn State University associate professor of communications at the Greater Allegheny campus. Furness reportedly replied to a popular Twitter account that posts unusual moments from American politics.

On March 26, the Twitter account shared a photo from 2017 of then-President Trump tossing out paper towels to Puerto Ricans who were ravaged by Hurricane Maria.

According to screenshots posted by Ngo, Furness replied to the tweet of Trump by writing, "Should've been Lincolnd five minutes later." Furness is referencing the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln, who was shot in the head by John Wilkes Booth in 1865.

Ngo also shared a screenshot of an alleged tweet from Furness written in September 2020, in which he hoped that several conservative commentators, as well as centrist and left-leaning figures, be killed.

"I'd like to build an arc and fill it with, Michael Tracey, Andrew Sullivan, Bari Weiss, Andy Ngo, Ian Miles Cheong, Jordan Peterson, Ben Shapiro, and Fox & Friends. And then launch it toward the sun," Furness wrote on Sept. 9, 2020.

Tracey is a journalist and political commentator who was a member of the progressive The Young Turks network and is known for his anti-war ideology. Sullivan is a British author and writer who has written for New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic, Time, and Newsweek. Weiss is a left-leaning writer who previously covered culture and politics at the New York Times until she resigned and later said the "newspaper of record" attempts to "satisfy the narrowest of audiences." Cheong is an online commentator who has written for several media outlets about gaming, culture, and politics. Peterson is a clinical psychologist and professor emeritus at the University of Toronto. Shapiro is a conservative commentator and founder of the Daily Wire.

Furness has since deleted his account with the handle "@punkademic."

On the Penn State University website, Furness wrote a description of himself.

"My name is Zack Furness and I am Associate Professor of Communications at Penn State Universitys Greater Allegheny campus, where I also serve as the Communications Program Coordinator and the WMKP Radio General Manager," Furness said.

"My work as both a researcher and a teacher draws upon a web of influences that include communication and cultural studies, cultural geography, feminist and Marxist theory, anarchism, environmentalism, critical pedagogy, history and philosophy of technology, and punk rock," he added.

Furness also said that he has "performed in punk bands and other musical projects since 1997, most recently in Barons, and my current research is all related to music in some way."

"During the 2018-2019 academic year, I began that work as a Visiting Scholar in the Department of Music at the University of Pittsburgh, while on sabbatical from Penn State," he noted.

The Post Millenial reported, "One particular communications class, titled 'Gender, Diversity & the Media,' explores the cultural, socioeconomic, historical, and political implications of media content, media practices, and media literacy."

The course syllabus stated, "Course readings and assignments are designed to help students build deeper understandings of gender, race, ethnicity, ability, sexual orientation and class diversity in media. Communication theory helps explain how media representations impact human construction of meaning in social relationships, in both the US and throughout the world."

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Always Getting Same BookTok Recommendations? Here’s Help – The Mary Sue

In the last year, TikTok has rapidly become one of the most influential social media platforms. The platform has also influenced publishingmainly through the community known as BookTok. BookTok consists of booksellers, authors, publishers, and (mostly) readers making videos about reading. After creators featured They Both Die at the End by Adam Silvera, sales of the book rose by 900%. Barnes and Noble began setting up #BookTok tables (and store TikTok accounts), and self-published books starting getting picked up by major publishers (like Olivia Blakes The Atlas Six, acquired by Tor).

Back in September, when I first covered the BookTok phenomenon, I pointed to the feedback loop from readers, then stabilized by (already super-acute) algorithms, that results in hyping up a bestselling book. When booksellers like Barnes & Noble construct these I saw it on #BookTok tables and pull from these lists, that increases the chances people will buy them. Then, readers go and engage with the same kind of content that convinced them to buy it, fueled by algorithms. Rinse, and repeat.

Im not criticizing because these books are popular. Ive read and enjoyed a handful of these authors and have some of the titles on my TBR list. Do I have a problem with them? Sure, some. Do I think there is an oversaturation of a handful of them in greater book discourse? Absolutely. Some of the obvious gaps are that the list is overwhelmingly (racially, not ethnically) white, and there is a gender disparity between fiction and non-fiction.

Authors who wind up promoted by these BookTok echo chambers often include the likes of Sarah J Maas, Holly Black, Holly Jackson, Tracy Deonn, Delia Owens (a whole mess), Madeline Miller, E. Lockhart, Leigh Bardugo, Emily Henry, and Taylor Jenkins Reid (especially her first two novels.) Non-fiction (if you even come across these videos) doesnt fare much better. Theyre (also) New York Times bestsellers from names like Bob Woodward, Robert Acosta, Malcolm Gladwell, Yuval Harai, and Robin Di Angelo.

Sometimes authors (both traditionally published and self-published) will get a boost from social media because of good luck, work ethic, and privilege. The privilege comes from the resources of being social media savvy or deemed attractive by a narrow window of white-centered beauty standards. However, many books that oversaturate BookTok are already supported by traditional publishingan industry with these same barriers (except maybe luck), is less involved. This structure extends into film/TV adaptations, book subscription boxes (like Illumicrate, Owlcrate, and Book of the Month) and celebrity book clubs (most influential to TikTok being Reeses) that work with publishers.

@books.with.lee

I appreciate those whose actually listen to BIPOC voices #readdiversebooks #diversifyyourbookshelves #RufflesOwnYourRidges #blackbooktok #bipoctiktok

? original sound - Castro??

The people that get the most views, attention, and engagement are also creators from a place of privilege. In the past, TikTok has admitted to suppressing the reach of those susceptible to bullying and harassment such as fat, queer and disabled creators. However, unconscious bias on the individual leads to people staying within their group. and their For You Page (FYP) ends up looking a lot like the people who look like them. The algorithm has everyone ending up at different lunch tables recommending the same books to the same people. People with similar interests and life experiences (including nationality) will already have similar books in common.

Good news for viewers at home! There is an easy-ish fix to this. Follow, engage, and like more videos by marginalized creators. Yes, many will still lust over a few of these titles, but they also center non-white, non-Western books in their lists and round ups all the time. For example, Black and brown creators dont wait until some viral act of racism or brutality happens to share books by these communities. And, when they do share Black books, they arent solely highlighting books centered on Black pain. This applies to many BookTokkers of color, marginalized religion (within the U.S.), gender, and sexuality.

Another group worth mentioning is the examination of books by male readers, especially for fiction. As much as Ill eye-roll and cringe at the more viral TikToks of men (particularly in the man-o-sphere and podcast land) talking about books, Ive also had great luck following some. If they mention Jordan Peterson, Robert Greene, any philosopher or dating book, take a quick left and reread the instructions because I said fiction. (There are always exceptions to this rule of course because, #NotAllMen.) If there is a particular trend based on an audio feature from a sub-community (based on a trope, genre, etc.), check there.

@bookpapi

WHERE MY DOMINICANS AT ?? #latinxbooks #latinxauthors #booktok #latinxbooktok #latinxbooktokker #dominicanrepublic #latinostiktok #avebtura #latinebooktok #bookrecommendations #latinxowned #latinxowned

? 5am ex calling - Mel?

Speaking of this audio feature, please use it. Its not just for creators but also for viewers to find other videos. Some audio trends later emerged to kinda counteract these same authors being passed around, so use it! One of the many BookTok specific ones includes the tag A Book You Have Not Seen. These interactions will help your FYP give new suggestions pretty consistently.

(image: Alyssa Shotwell, ByteDance, and various publishers.)

The Mary Sue may have advertising partnerships with some of the publishers and titles on this list.

The Mary Sue has a strict comment policythat forbids, but is not limited to, personal insults towardanyone, hate speech, and trolling.

Have a tip we should know? [emailprotected]

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The breeze of change is blowing – Kuensel, Buhutan’s National Newspaper

This article offers some ways to think about the recent (voluntary) separation of some 44 executives from the civil service after the leadership assessment exercise. The matter must also be viewed in the context of the unfortunate leak, causing something equivalent of national humiliation for those who alas, missed the mark. It was interesting to observe the reactions sudden surges of sympathy, equal expressions of the event being almost poetic in its justice.

I find it very hard to completely agree with either. I wish everybody well: those who made it and those who didnt. The former now has the onus of living up to a label and great expectations. The latter, well, many of them are walking away with 2 years of pay and pension benefits, so lets not feel too bad for them, especially considering that we have many, many people to feel bad for in the current climate.

Now, we could briefly entertain the thought that perhaps, the assessment metric was flawed. But for the sake of this piece, we can proceed with the belief that the assessment tested something and many missed the mark of whatever was being measured.

The assessment may not have told us everything, but it told us something. It told us that perhaps, some individuals may have been kind and caring about their subordinates but did not really understand what the point of their job really was, or that some individuals may have been intellectually proficient but did not possess the basic traits of a competent manager that transcends cultures, languages and countries. And worst of all, some individuals may have been found to not care about their subordinates, not really understand what their job was and be incompetent managers all at once!

So what can we make of this experience in a way that is compassionate without losing sight of the things that were a problem and that needed to be addressed? Is there a middle path?

What I find fundamentally missing from the discourse is a reflection on our own complicity in feeding, maintaining, even most perversely, loving such a system. And I hope I am speaking to all, whether within or outside the civil service.

I cant help but be reminded of Alexandr Solzhenitsyn, who in the 20th century was sentenced to the Soviet concentration camps and wrote the Gulag Archipelago about his own as well as others experiences in the camps. According to some, the reason that this book, globally famed to bring awareness to the horrors of Soviet tyranny, is said to have struck a chord so deep that it de-legitimized an entire system, is that Solzhenitsyn first and foremost took personal responsibility for having let such a system fester. The following excerpt is from the book 12 Rules for Life by Jordan Peterson:

. . he (Solzhenitsyn) asked himself the most difficult of questions: had he personally contributed to the catastrophe of his life? If so, how? . . . How had he missed the mark in the past? How many times had he acted against his own conscious, engaging in actions that he knew to be wrong? How many times had he betrayed himself, and lied?

Similarly, how many times did we feel that we should not ruffle any feathers? How many things did we decide to sweep things under the rug? How many of us convinced not only ourselves but also others that we will all put up with it until we get what we want and it isnt our problem anymore?

So I urge all of us to begin by taking some personal responsibility. Before anyone else, ask yourself, did I, in any way, personally, contribute to this event? If you are reading this article, it means that you can read and in English. If you understand this, you must be educated sufficiently to be able to comprehend some relatively complex ideas. You are also the type of person to read newspapers, perhaps on your smartphone. So you must be privileged, or at least not be at the absolute bottom rung of society to absolve yourself of the sort of agency where you are empowered to do something, anything.

This experience above all should be a mirror held up against our own images. It reflects our shortcomings, it taunts us with all that we arent and all that we could be.

Nobody has the answer to if this going to be good for us or if this is going to end up making things even worse. I would strongly caution against foretelling the future. But there is no doubt that something or some things are changing. I hope it changes for the better and I hope we all work towards ensuring that outcome.

The country is at a tipping point. The barriers such as our geography, our obscurity, our lack of integration into the global system that shielded us in the past from the worst impacts of war or economic depression do not exist anymore. But the disappearance of these barriers is also what will precisely bring us opportunities and prosperity.

It is awe-inspiring to think of the extent to which the civil service can really make a difference. All of us were witnesses to its potential as well as its eminent waste. All of us have the responsibility to demand as well as make the civil service and all of its decision-making, influence and privileges work for the people.

So let us take a leaf from Solzhenitsyn who, quoting Peterson again, . . . took an axe to the trunk of the tree whose bitter fruits had nourished him so poorlyand whose planting he had witnessed and supported.

I welcome further discussion.

Contributed by

Chencho Gyeltshen

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Anthony G. "Tony" Drueding Obituary – The Daily Journal – The Daily Journal

Anthony G. "Tony" Drueding

Franklin Twp. - Anthony G. "Tony" Drueding, 80, of Franklin Twp, NJ passed away on Friday afternoon March 25, 2022 at home where he had been under the care of family & hospice. Tony was born in Abington, PA and was a longtime resident of S. Jersey. He was the son of the late Glendoris "Doris" (Lamberson) & Bernard Drueding, Sr. He was pre-deceased by his son Anthony Drueding, Jr., Sister Jane & brothers Richard, William, James & Bernard.

Tony was a graduate of Bensalem High School and joined the Navy after graduation. He served on the USS San Marcos & the Shangri La working in the boiler room during the Bay of Pigs invasion. After his military service he went to work in the elevator business having spent the most of his career with National Elevator Co before retiring. Tony enjoyed travelling, was an amazing artist and avid collector of rocks & gems. He discovered a fossil during his travels that is a part of the stonerose collection in Washington State. He loved and was very involved with his family.

He is survived by his wife of 34 yrs; Theresa (Lovato), Children; Michael (Claire) Drueding, Wayne & Cheyenne Drueding, Step children; Robert (Lynda) Elia, Toni (Elia) DiGiovacchino, Barry (Sandy) Elia, Wendy (Drueding) Barth, Tammy (Drueding) McShane, 18 Grandchildren; Katelyn Quinn, Staci Elia, Robert (Taylor) Elia, Nicholas (Sara) DiGiovacchino, Elizabeth (Connor) McKinnis, Abigail Elia, Sawyer Elia, Sarah, Lilly & Abigail Drueding, Enrique (Candace) Sultan, Becky Lynn (Michael) Dinsmore, Taylor Barth. 5 great grandchildren; Jordan & John Peterson, Enrique & Giselle Sultan & Bryce Dinsmore. Brother; Robert (Eva) Drueding, Sister: Katherine Shaffer.

Relatives & friends will be received on Friday April 1, 2022 from 11:00 to 12:00 PM at the Pancoast Funeral Home, 676 S. Main Road, Vineland, NJ where his funeral service will be conducted at 12 noon. Burial will follow in the Siloam Cemetery, Vineland, NJ. For those who wish, memorial contributions may be made to the Alzheimer's Association, 225 N. Michigan Ave., FL 17, Chicago, IL 60601. To e-mail condolences & or tributes, please visit http://www.pancoastfuneralhome.com

Posted online on March 27, 2022

Published in Daily Journal

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Questions Answered: Whats Up Next for Vikings FA Week 3, Best FA Signing to Date, Patrick Peterson Y… – VikingsTerritory.com

Kwesi Adofo-Mensah

The following questions are about current Minnesota Vikings topics, answered by VikingsTerritory. Today is the March 26th edition, addressed in a from-the-hip fashion. If you have questions, please email them to d.baker@vikingsterritory.com.

Also, please note: These are opinion-based responses. Some answers will be incorrect from time to time. But well try to keep that to a minimum.

A: The easy answer is an offensive lineman, particularly an interior one.

The team has around $11-$15 million in cap space, although much of that will be needed to sign rookies after the draft. Unless Kevin OConnell and his staff believe they can squeeze something out of Garrett Bradbury, Oli Udoh, and Wyatt Davis that the previous regime could not, it would be wise to sign a solid interior offensive lineman.

So, that is our prediction. Either another cornerback or an offensive lineman.

A: Undoubtedly, ZaDarius Smith was the splashiest signing, but we believe Jordan Hicks is the top value-based signing.

One need not worry about Hicks injury track record as is the case for Smith so Hicks taking over the Anthony Barr role will pay dividends in Minnesota. Hicks is a leader, was considered the heart of the Cardinals defense, and will receive ample playing time.

Give us Hicks on this one.

A: We formally predict Peterson will head elsewhere, not rejoining the Vikings in 2022.

About five times, Peterson stated he wanted to return to the Vikings, but a deal has not been made. Hes likely too expensive for Kwesi Adofo-Mensahs value mentality.

If a deal were attainable, it wouldve been finagled by now.

Dustin Baker is a political scientist who graduated from the University of Minnesota in 2007. His YouTube Channel, VikesNow, debuts in March 2022. He hosts a podcast with Bryant McKinnie, which airs every Wednesday with Raun Sawh and Sally from Minneapolis. His Viking fandom dates back to 1996. Listed guilty pleasures: Peanut Butter Ice Cream, The Sopranos, and The Doors (the band).

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What The 2022 Oscars Hit (And Miss) About Religion – Religion Unplugged

Religion Unplugged believes in a diversity of well-reasoned and well-researched opinions. This piece reflects the views of the author and does not necessarily represent those of Religion Unplugged, its staff and contributors.

(OPINION) This years Oscar nominees for Best Picture deal explicitly and intelligently with religion in ways that Hollywood movies rarely do. But the blind spots they reveal about Hollywoods thinking on religion are equally as telling.

The Oscars typically give a pretty decent picture of where the country is culturally at any given year. Any movie thats nominated has to be pitched by the filmmakers, get funding from investors, be well-received by at least some critics and, finally, be selected by the Oscars committee. Whatever you want to say about the biases of the film industry, the critics and the academy and well address those later the multiple classes of gatekeepers whom the movies have to pass through in order to be nominated gives you a pretty clear picture of what a huge segment of societys culture-makers are experiencing in the world.

Unlike Oscars past, where movies either ignored religion or cast it in broad negative stereotypes, this years crop of movies has a far more nuanced and interesting portrait of religion that reflects more accurately and challengingly how America is wrestling with religion today: from disappointment in religion leading many to deconstruction to acknowledgement of where religion is helping society to potential solutions for fixing the problems in religion.

The first theme that is obvious in the Oscar nominee movies this year is deconstruction. Most of the films feature characters who are deconstructing faith to some degree or another.

Some movies, like Belfast or Licorice Pizza, follow people or feature characters who see evil done in the name of religion or simply by evil men and respond by turning away from faith. In Belfast, Buddy based on director Kenneth Braneigh himself as a young boy grows up in an Ireland torn apart by Protestant versus Catholic religious terrorism. His father is adamant that religion is the problem but sends him to church anyway for the sake of his mother. Barrys impression of the priest at the church he goes to is that of a sweaty, screaming fire-and-brimstone preacher who gives Buddy a lot to think about regarding hell but not much else. Later, Buddy asks his dad if it would be okay if he dated a girl he likes even though shes Catholic. His father answers that it doesnt matter, as long as shes kind.

The protagonist in Licorice Pizza, Alana Kane, makes the mistake of inviting the guy she likes to her familys place for dinner. Her father asks him to say the prayer, but he refuses because hes an atheist, arguing politely that he cant believe in a God who allows evil in the world. This embarrasses her and causes a fight between them.

Other films show people deconstructing their faith in religion and reconstructing it again to a version of faith theyre more comfortable with. Dont Look Up is the second Oscar film to feature Timothee Chalemet as a young man whos deconstructed his religious faith. And if you watch the movie, you can see why most of the film centers on characters who are atheists or politicians who cynically use God in their speeches to play to the crowds while pursuing their own ambition at the expense of the people they are trying to serve. Chalemets Yule comes in at the end and proudly says he believes in God but not the way his parents do. My parents raised me evangelical, and I hate them, but I found my own way to it, my own relationship, he says. Later he leads all of the heroes in a prayer that they know is going to be their last meal.

Dune, meanwhile, portrays a darker path: having your faith deconstructed as a manipulative lie to gain power and then deciding to embrace the lie to gain power for yourself. Dune follows the story of Paul Atreides (Timothee Chalemet), a Dukes son of an intergalactic empire in the far future whos being groomed to be the chosen one by his mother and her order of Jei-like nuns called the Bene Gesserit.

During the movie, he discovers that the Bene Gesserit, supposed to merely be advisers to their empires leaders, are secretly manipulating them to bring about the prophecy of the chosen one including spreading the rumor that Paul is the chosen one in order to manipulate the natives of the planet Pauls father is ruling. This makes Paul cynical of his religious upbringing. And he becomes further darkened to it when he sees the future and realizes that he wont be a hero but a tyrant. When his father is killed and he loses his kingdom, Paul cynically decides to use the prophecy to manipulate the natives into making him their leader anyway.

The Power of The Dog references deconstruction of religion more implicitly than explicitly. The film barely features religion in it at all except for the title, which is a reference to Psalm 22:20 Deliver my soul from the sword; my darling from the power of the dog and one scene in which the lead character reads the psalm to himself at the end of the film. The whole film, however, is largely interpreted as a deconstruction of traditional masculinity as represented in the myth of the cowboy, which is highly tied to conservative Christianity in the cultural conversation at present, a la books like Kristen Kobes Du Mezs Jesus and John Wayne.

Not all movies on the Best Picture Nominee list are deconstructive of religion. Coda doesnt feature religion at all except for some jokes that the stars family make among themselves. King Richard and West Side Story both portray religion as a normal, even positive, part of the characters lives. West Side Story is notable on this list because it is a remake of a movie that featured basically no religion at all, yet the remake has a solid amount of religion in it.

Although its not on the Best Picture nominee list, we would be remiss if we didnt mention The Eyes of Tammy Faye, for which Jessica Chastain is nominated for Best Actress. This film which we reviewed here centers on the true-life story of celebrity evangelical televangelists Jim Bakker and Tammy Faye, who were the face of prosperity gospel Christianity in the 70s and 80s until scandals involving fraud and sex tore down their empire. Tammy Faye is portrayed as a true-believer Christian who is swept up in her husbands toxic ambition and then has to reconstruct her faith in the wake of the scandal.

This focus on deconstruction isnt surprising. Deconstruction has been the buzzword of the moment in religious circles, with numerous public scandals of abuse by Christian leaders and the large-scale support by conservative evangelicals of the less-than-Christian President Donald Trump and his policies causing many to question their faith. In these communities, books like Jesus and John Wayne, which attempt to deconstruct the toxic culture of evangelical communities while reconstructing a more positive faith, have become best sellers. All these movies reflect the way people of faith in the modern world wrestle with the ways that religion can be toxic and decide for themselves whether theyre going to abandon their faith (Belfast, Licorice Pizza), reconstruct a healthier version of their faith (Dont Look Up, The Eyes of Tammy Faye) or join the toxic religion to benefit themselves (Dune).

One of the unusual things at the Oscars this year is how interested it is in showcasing and exploring the positive influence of religion. Oscar nominees this year, while they show the ways religion can go bad, also often showcase religions ability to inspire positive action within people and communities.

Often, this manifests in ministries of reconciliation or protection of the weak or necessary political change. In West Side Story, the women are the religious ones, and they are also the ones working to keep the men away from violence. In The Power of The Dog, the son reads Psalm 22:20 after killing his uncle in defense of his mom. He appears to gain comfort from this that he did the right thing. In Dune, the religious order of the Bene Gesserit, while they may be cynical and manipulative and lie to get people to do what they want, are powerful. And their influence can be positive as well as negative. Paul, although he is cynical about the Bene Gesserits manipulation of his life and the beliefs of the Fremen when he arrives on their planet, eventually embraces his powers for good.

Religion is also given credit for the comfort that it brings people. In Drive My Car, Oto Kafuku, the wife of protagonist Yusuke Kafuku, tells a story with reincarnation at the center that helps bring catharsis to her own feelings and is a happy bonding experience for them. Later, the actors in the play of Uncle Vanya that Yusuke is directing recite a scene in which one character asks what the point of what theyre doing is if people will forget them when theyre gone. Another character says to them, They may forget you, but God wont. This gives them comfort.

In Dont Look Up, Yule is portrayed as one of the most positive and genuine characters in the story. At the end, he leads a prayer of gratitude to God, which brings comfort and closure to everyone as they prepare to die. It is both profound and poignant. King Richard also shows Richard and his family sharing grace together.

Whats most fascinating about these portrayals is how well they line up with recent data on the benefits of religion: comfort and social bonding. Many studies have shown how belief in God is good for your mental health. But a recent study showed that while most Americans mental health deeply declined during the pandemic, the only people whose mental health actually improved were those who regularly attended in-person church services. On social bonding, people who regularly attend in-person church services are far less likely to get divorced, and those who identify as religious conservatives report having the highest relationship satisfaction in marriage.

Building on the point that religion is good when it focuses on comfort and community bonding, Oscar 2022 films hint that religion can be fixed if the people who are more naturally good at comfort and community bonding are in charge of it: women.

As previously noted, the women in West Side Story are both the most religious and the most driven to push the men toward reconciliation. Throughout the story, the women are the moral consciences and the better angels that the men either listen to or ignore and when they do ignore them, they stand in judgment over them to condemn them.

In Drive My Car, women tend to be the centers of spiritual influence and the people who facilitate social bonding and personal healing. Oto tells Yusuke the story about reincarnation as a way to help them bond, and its a woman in the Uncle Vanya play who speaks words of comfort about God. In Yusukes arc, it is his wife Oto whose actions initiate and support the rituals that maintain their bond, while it is her absence that breaks her husband emotionally and the presence of a new woman Misaki Watari, his driver that helps him heal from his debilitating grief.

In Belfast, Buddys grandmother is the only deeply religious person who is portrayed positively in the story. While the religious young men spend the time tearing apart the city to kill the religious people on the other side, she spends her time comforting and caring for her family the best she can.

In The Power of The Dog, much of the conflict centers around whether or not Peter will embrace the influence of his mother Rose (Kirsten Dunst) or the influence of his stepdads brother Phil (Benedict Cumberbatch). The mothers influence can be seen in the way she encourages Peter to be like her in prioritizing care and service and being sensitive and artistic. Phil mocks these qualities in him publicly and encourages him to follow his own example in embracing the more traditional masculine ideals of rugged toughness and disagreeable assertiveness or aggressiveness. Peter seems torn between the two, partly due to his potential growing mutual infatuation with Phil, until it becomes clear to him that Phils aggression makes him a threat to his mother. As a result, he disposes of Phil in a more traditionally feminine, sneaky way. Religion doesnt come explicitly into play in these themes until the very end, when Peter reads Psalm 22:20, seemingly affirming his choice to kill his uncle to save his mother. Also, in current cultural conversations, the deconstruction of the masculine cowboy archetype and the deconstruction of Christianity and its replacement with a more feminine religion are closely related more on that later.

The Eyes of Tammy Faye portrays Tammy Faye as the shining example of true Christianity whose only goal is to love people and make them feel loved through comfort and community bonding. But she is led astray, and her message is corrupted by her husband and her male friends corruption of Christianity into one built around ambition for wealth and political power, until their inevitable fall and her return to her original authentic faith.

The idea that the problem with religion is its hypermasculinity, and its potential redemption in restoring Christianitys true femininity, is one with a lot of traction in cultural conversations right now. Articles that expose the abuse of women by Christians in power like the recent reporting from Christianity Today that exposed sexual harrassment went unchecked in the organization imply that sexism in evangelical culture is pervasive. Recent books like Jesus and John Wayne, The Making of Biblical Womanhood and Recovering From Biblical Manhood and Womanhood have won over a great many people in the Christian and secular spaces with their arguments that evangelicals have corrupted Christianity with hypermasculinity and sexism, both of which need to be purged in order to restore an authentic, nontoxic Christianity.

Despite this potential hope of a nontoxic religion through greater feminine influence, there is an underlying despair in the Oscar nominees that even a healthy religion is not enough to defeat the evils that threaten our world.

All the love and compassion and pleas for peace of the women in West Side Story dont stop the men from killing each other. The religion of Yule comforts the heroes in Dont Look Up as theyre about to die but is powerless to stop it. Buddys grandmothers love and care for her family in Belfast cant stop the terrorism in their country that threatens them and cant stop them from needing to leave the country in order to find a job to allow the family to stay together. In The Power of The Dog, violence even if its more feminine violence is the only way ultimately to save the mother from the man who threatens her. In The Eyes of Tammy Faye, Fayes authentic Christianity isnt enough to stop her husband and his friends from pulling the wool over her eyes and destroying the legacy she is building for a potentially better version of Christianity. Paul Atrades sees the future and can see that he will eventually become just as much of a mass-murdering imperial tyrant as any of his enemies are.

This despair reflects with depressing accuracy what we see in the real world. The same study that showed that those who are religious tend to be happier and have stronger bonds with family and friends also showed that being religious made zero difference in rates of domestic abuse. And those who hope things will change in the church if women gain more power keep getting bad news that brings that hope into doubt. The Times Up organization, a completely women-led nonprofit created to help women who have been sexually assaulted or harassed, has been rocked by multiple scandals since its inception in 2018 including its leader having to step down due to allegations of perpetuating abuse. This skepticism that elevating women will curb sexual assault is born out among teachers, who are almost 70% women and also 100 times more likely to commit sexual assault against their students than Catholic priests. Those who hope elevating women in the church will reverse the tide of religious decline often find themselves disappointed that the church denominations that elevate women to leadership find themselves losing members, while the denominations that ban female leadership retain their membership proportional to the population even if they cant brag that they are growing.

The Oscars this year do a great job of surveying much of the cultures struggles with religion and culture generally now. It captures the deconstruction of religion, masculinity and democracy that much of our culture is feeling, the hope that the future is female can save us and the despair that this future is unfounded.

Theres much that watching these movies can deeply teach us and challenge us about the world we live in. I still remember when depictions of religion in Hollywood movies let alone the Oscars were almost nonexistent and uniformly negative. So the fact that Hollywood has evolved to a place where it can show the nuances to religion in our culture in ways that are shockingly well backed up by data is deeply refreshing.

But it would be foolish to think that if we watched the Oscar nominees we would be getting anywhere near a complete picture of the religious conversation in America at present. Most obviously, there is an entire half of the country that isnt disillusioned about religion due to Christians embrace of conservative politics because they also embrace those politics. They see the number of fallen evangelicals as a reflection of general fallen human nature rather than something wrong with their theology after all, theres at least as many sex abuse scandals among secular liberals in Hollywood and politics and a sign that the country further needs the religious values they support, such as banning critical race theory in schools or launching conservative entertainment to compete with Hollywood, like The Daily Wire.

Likewise, there is deep disagreement over the solution to whatever problems that do exist. There is a growing Christian manosphere that believes in opposition to those who think the hope of the church in women that the problems of the church come from the way its emphasis on feminine values of comfort and community over male-appealing virtues, like godly ambition and competition, have alienated and stunted the growth of men. This view is represented by Aaron Renns The Masculinist, Michael Fosters Its Good To Be A Man or The Church Impotent, and Leon Podles Losing The Good Portion. You can also put Dr. Jordan Peterson generally in this camp. Although hes not a Christian per se, he makes the same general argument. And a growing number of writers and thinkers are pushing back against the narrative that the modern world gives us cause to despair. And thats only what they miss in predominantly White and Christian religious conversations happening in America.

The danger of Hollywood's blind spots on these religious topics is that people who primarily engage with religious issues through the art that Hollywood makes and the Academy elevates will have their thinking narrowed to exclude more than half of the American religious experience. Art is how we engage our hearts as well as our minds on topics of importance. If our imagination is too narrow to understand the experience of our neighbors, we lose the ability to empathize with, be challenged by, or engage with them whether or not we ultimately agree with them.

Then again, blind spots are a part of life. Hollywood has always had massive blind spots to some degree whether its with religion, race, politics or sex and gender. And Hollywood is not alone in that. To some degree, its inevitable in any organization or community you find yourself in.

But if you do keep in mind the blind spots, the movies highlighted at the Oscars show remarkable progress in creating art that constructively helps us engage with the challenges, problems, virtues and solutions in navigating a world where religion matters in our lives. And that is something to be deeply grateful for.

Joseph Holmes is an award-nominated filmmaker and culture critic living in New York City. He is co-host of the podcast The Overthinkers and its companion website theoverthinkersjournal.com, where he discusses art, culture and faith with his fellow overthinkers.

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Time crystal in a quantum computer | Stanford News

There is a huge global effort to engineer a computer capable of harnessing the power of quantum physics to carry out computations of unprecedented complexity. While formidable technological obstacles still stand in the way of creating such a quantum computer, todays early prototypes are still capable of remarkable feats.

The Google Sycamore chip used in the creation of a time crystal. (Image credit: Google Quantum AI)

For example, the creation of a new phase of matter called a time crystal. Just as a crystals structure repeats in space, a time crystal repeats in time and, importantly, does so infinitely and without any further input of energy like a clock that runs forever without any batteries. The quest to realize this phase of matter has been a longstanding challenge in theory and experiment one that has now finally come to fruition.

In research published Nov. 30 in Nature, a team of scientists from Stanford University, Google Quantum AI, the Max Planck Institute for Physics of Complex Systems and Oxford University detail their creation of a time crystal using Googles Sycamore quantum computing hardware.

The big picture is that we are taking the devices that are meant to be the quantum computers of the future and thinking of them as complex quantum systems in their own right, said Matteo Ippoliti, a postdoctoral scholar at Stanford and co-lead author of the work. Instead of computation, were putting the computer to work as a new experimental platform to realize and detect new phases of matter.

For the team, the excitement of their achievement lies not only in creating a new phase of matter but in opening up opportunities to explore new regimes in their field of condensed matter physics, which studies the novel phenomena and properties brought about by the collective interactions of many objects in a system. (Such interactions can be far richer than the properties of the individual objects.)

Time-crystals are a striking example of a new type of non-equilibrium quantum phase of matter, said Vedika Khemani, assistant professor of physics at Stanford and a senior author of the paper. While much of our understanding of condensed matter physics is based on equilibrium systems, these new quantum devices are providing us a fascinating window into new non-equilibrium regimes in many-body physics.

The basic ingredients to make this time crystal are as follows: The physics equivalent of a fruit fly and something to give it a kick. The fruit fly of physics is the Ising model, a longstanding tool for understanding various physical phenomena including phase transitions and magnetism which consists of a lattice where each site is occupied by a particle that can be in two states, represented as a spin up or down.

During her graduate school years, Khemani, her doctoral advisor Shivaji Sondhi, then at Princeton University, and Achilleas Lazarides and Roderich Moessner at the Max Planck Institute for Physics of Complex Systems stumbled upon this recipe for making time crystals unintentionally. They were studying non-equilibrium many-body localized systems systems where the particles get stuck in the state in which they started and can never relax to an equilibrium state. They were interested in exploring phases that might develop in such systems when they are periodically kicked by a laser. Not only did they manage to find stable non-equilibrium phases, they found one where the spins of the particles flipped between patterns that repeat in time forever, at a period twice that of the driving period of the laser, thus making a time crystal.

The periodic kick of the laser establishes a specific rhythm to the dynamics. Normally the dance of the spins should sync up with this rhythm, but in a time crystal it doesnt. Instead, the spins flip between two states, completing a cycle only after being kicked by the laser twice. This means that the systems time translation symmetry is broken. Symmetries play a fundamental role in physics, and they are often broken explaining the origins of regular crystals, magnets and many other phenomena; however, time translation symmetry stands out because unlike other symmetries, it cant be broken in equilibrium. The periodic kick is a loophole that makes time crystals possible.

The doubling of the oscillation period is unusual, but not unprecedented. And long-lived oscillations are also very common in the quantum dynamics of few-particle systems. What makes a time crystal unique is that its a system of millions of things that are showing this kind of concerted behavior without any energy coming in or leaking out.

Its a completely robust phase of matter, where youre not fine-tuning parameters or states but your system is still quantum, said Sondhi, professor of physics at Oxford and co-author of the paper. Theres no feed of energy, theres no drain of energy, and it keeps going forever and it involves many strongly interacting particles.

While this may sound suspiciously close to a perpetual motion machine, a closer look reveals that time crystals dont break any laws of physics. Entropy a measure of disorder in the system remains stationary over time, marginally satisfying the second law of thermodynamics by not decreasing.

Between the development of this plan for a time crystal and the quantum computer experiment that brought it to reality, many experiments by many different teams of researchers achieved various almost-time-crystal milestones. However, providing all the ingredients in the recipe for many-body localization (the phenomenon that enables an infinitely stable time crystal) had remained an outstanding challenge.

For Khemani and her collaborators, the final step to time crystal success was working with a team at Google Quantum AI. Together, this group used Googles Sycamore quantum computing hardware to program 20 spins using the quantum version of a classical computers bits of information, known as qubits.

Revealing just how intense the interest in time crystals currently is, another time crystal was published in Science this month. That crystal was created using qubits within a diamond by researchers at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands.

The researchers were able to confirm their claim of a true time crystal thanks to special capabilities of the quantum computer. Although the finite size and coherence time of the (imperfect) quantum device meant that their experiment was limited in size and duration so that the time crystal oscillations could only be observed for a few hundred cycles rather than indefinitely the researchers devised various protocols for assessing the stability of their creation. These included running the simulation forward and backward in time and scaling its size.

A view of the Google dilution refrigerator, which houses the Sycamore chip. (Image credit: Google Quantum AI)

We managed to use the versatility of the quantum computer to help us analyze its own limitations, said Moessner, co-author of the paper and director at the Max Planck Institute for Physics of Complex Systems. It essentially told us how to correct for its own errors, so that the fingerprint of ideal time-crystalline behavior could be ascertained from finite time observations.

A key signature of an ideal time crystal is that it shows indefinite oscillations from all states. Verifying this robustness to choice of states was a key experimental challenge, and the researchers devised a protocol to probe over a million states of their time crystal in just a single run of the machine, requiring mere milliseconds of runtime. This is like viewing a physical crystal from many angles to verify its repetitive structure.

A unique feature of our quantum processor is its ability to create highly complex quantum states, said Xiao Mi, a researcher at Google and co-lead author of the paper. These states allow the phase structures of matter to be effectively verified without needing to investigate the entire computational space an otherwise intractable task.

Creating a new phase of matter is unquestionably exciting on a fundamental level. In addition, the fact that these researchers were able to do so points to the increasing usefulness of quantum computers for applications other than computing. I am optimistic that with more and better qubits, our approach can become a main method in studying non-equilibrium dynamics, said Pedram Roushan, researcher at Google and senior author of the paper.

We think that the most exciting use for quantum computers right now is as platforms for fundamental quantum physics, said Ippoliti. With the unique capabilities of these systems, theres hope that you might discover some new phenomenon that you hadnt predicted.

This work was led by Stanford University, Google Quantum AI, the Max Planck Institute for Physics of Complex Systems and Oxford University. The full author list is available in the Nature paper.

This research was funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), a Google Research Award, the Sloan Foundation, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.

To read all stories about Stanford science, subscribe to the biweeklyStanford Science Digest.

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QunaSys Raises $10M in its Series B Funding Led by VGI to Expand Overseas Markets Further as a Japan-Based Quantum Computer Software Startup – PR…

TOKYO, March 28, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- QunaSys Inc. ("QunaSys"), one of the world's leading developers of innovative algorithms in chemistry focused on accelerating the development of quantum technology applicability, has announced today that it has raised $10 million in its series B funding stage the led by JIC Venture Growth Investments ("VGI"), with participation from ANRI, Fujitsu Ventures Fund LLC, Global Brain, HPC Systems Inc., JST SUCCESS Program, MUFJ Capital, Shinsei Corporate Investment Limited, and Zeon Corporation. Simultaneously, QunaSys has announced that it has come to an agreement with Zeon Corporation, Fujitsu Limited, and HPC Sytems Inc. for a capital tie-up and a business alliance. The investment means an important progress for QunaSys since the previous financing in 2019.

Since 2019, QunaSys has grown its R&D and business development activities and achieved record business growth. In July 2020, QunaSys established QPARC, a Japanese consortium to study quantum computing applicability of quantum computers. Since then, more than 50 companies have participated in QPARC and the consortium has explored different quantum computing use cases, such as new energy analysis, molecular structure optimization, or sustainable material manufacturing, from ENEOS Holding and JSR Corporation.

In October 2021, QunaSys launched "Qamuy", a cloud-accessible quantum computing development platform that now has more than 3.3 million jobs executed over it. In anticipation of the quantum computing market adoption in the upcoming years, QunaSys aims to make its "Qamuy" available as the global de-facto standard for main hardware devices.

"Although quantum computer hardware is being developed around the world, for quantum computers to be widely used by users it is essential to have appropriate algorithms to meet the challenges and software that serves as an interface for users to master quantum computers. We have invested in QunaSys because we believe that QunaSys will be an indispensable company for the future spread of quantum computers in Japan. " Yuki Kuwabara, JIC Venture Growth Investments Co., Ltd., Principal

QunaSys is collaborating with Europe based consortiums to boost quantum computing, working together with the Pistoia Alliance in the development of quantum computing in the Pharma Industry and the Quantum Flagship program contributing to re-train industry workers with quantum computing for chemistry learning programs.

"It has been four years since we established QunaSys, andsince then with the help of our talented members and companies at the forefront of their industry, we have been working towards the practical application of quantum computers. This fundraising will help accelerate the development of more usable quantum computing chemical software and expand current business overseas to open a European base." Tennin Yan, QunaSys Inc. CEO.

Explore career opportunities at QunaSys and join the quantum computing revolution! >> https://qunasys.com/en/careers

About QunaSys Inc.

QunaSys is the world's leading developer of innovative algorithms in chemistry focused on accelerating the development of quantum technology applicability. QunaSys enables maximization of the power of quantum computing through its advanced joint research that addresses cutting-edge technologies providing Qamuy, one of the most powerful quantum chemical calculation cloud software to ever exist,fostering the development of collaboration through its QPARC industry consortium,and working with research institutions from both academia and government sectors. QunaSys software runs on multiple platforms with applicability in all chemical-relatedindustries to encouragethe adoption of quantumcomputing.

*All company and product names mentioned herein are trademarks or registered trademarks of QunaSys, Inc. or their respective companies.

CONTACT: QunaSys Inc., E-mail: [emailprotected]

SOURCE QunaSys Inc.

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Better AI, unhackable communication, spotting submarines: the quantum tech arms race is heating up – The Mandarin

Quantum technology, which makes use of the surprising and often counterintuitive properties of the subatomic universe, is revolutionising the way information is gathered, stored, shared and analysed.

The commercial and scientific potential of the quantum revolution is vast, but it is in national security that quantum technology is making the biggest waves. National governments are by far the heaviest investors in quantum research and development.

Quantum technology promises breakthroughs in weapons, communications, sensing and computing technology that could change the worlds balance of military power. The potential for strategic advantage has spurred a major increase in funding and research and development in recent years.

The three key areas of quantum technology are computing, communications and sensing. Particularly in the United States and China, all three are now seen as crucial parts of the struggle for economic and military supremacy.

Developing quantum technology isnt cheap. Only a small number of states have the organisational capacity and technological know-how to compete.

Russia, India, Japan, the European Union and Australia have established significant quantum research and development programs. But China and the US hold a substantial lead in the new quantum race.

And the race is heating up. In 2015 the US was the worlds largest investor in quantum technology, having spent around US$500 million dollars. By 2021 this investment had grown to almost US$2.1 billion.

However, Chinese investment in quantum technology in the same period expanded from US$300 million to an estimated US$13 billion.

The leaders of the two nations, Joe Biden and Xi Jinping, have both emphasised the importance of quantum technology as a critical national security tool in recent years.

The US federal government has established a three pillars model of quantum research, under which federal investment is split between civilian, defence and intelligence agencies.

In China, information on quantum security programs is more opaque, but the Peoples Liberation Army is known to be supporting quantum research through its own military science academies as well as extensive funding programs into the broader scientific community.

Advances in quantum computing could result in a leap in artificial intelligence and machine learning.

This could improve the performance of lethal autonomous weapons systems (which can select and engage targets without human oversight). It would also make it easier to analyse the large data sets used in defence intelligence and cyber security.

Improved machine learning may also confer a major advantage in carrying out (and defending against) cyber attacks on both civilian and military infrastructure.

The most powerful current quantum computer (as far as we know) is made by the US company IBM, which works closely with US defence and intelligence.

Quantum communication systems can be completely secure and unhackable. Quantum communication is also required for networking quantum computers, which is expected to enhance quantum computational power exponentially.

China is the clear global leader here. A quantum communication network using ground and satellite connections already links Beijing, Shanghai, Jinan and Heifei.

Chinas prioritisation of secure quantum communications is likely linked to revelations of US covert global surveillance operations. The US has been by far the most advanced and effective communications, surveillance and intelligence power for the past 70 years but that could change with a successful Chinese effort.

Quantum computing and communications hold out the promise of future advantage, but the quantum technology closest to military deployment today is quantum sensing.

New quantum sensing systems offer more sensitive detection and measurement of the physical environment. Existing stealth systems, including the latest generation of warplanes and ultra-quiet nuclear submarines, may no longer be so hard to spot.

Superconducting quantum interference devices (or SQUIDs), which can make extremely sensitive measurements of magnetic fields, are expected to make it easier to detect submarines underwater in the near future.

At present, undetectable submarines armed with nuclear missiles are regarded as an essential deterrent against nuclear war because they could survive an attack on their home country and retaliate against the attacker. Networks of more advanced SQUIDs could make these submarines more detectable (and vulnerable) in the future, upsetting the balance of nuclear deterrence and the logic of mutually assured destruction.

The US is integrating quantum cooperation agreements into existing alliances such as NATO, as well as into more recent strategic arrangements such as the AustraliaUKUS AUKUS security pact and the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (the Quad) between Australia, India, Japan, and the US.

China already cooperates with Russia in many areas of technology, and events may well propel closer quantum cooperation.

In the Cold War between the US and the USSR, nuclear weapons were the transformative technology. International standards and agreements were developed to regulate them and ensure some measure of safety and predictability.

In much the same way, new accords and arrangements will be needed as the quantum arms race heats up.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Better AI, unhackable communication, spotting submarines: the quantum tech arms race is heating up - The Mandarin

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