"Gobbledigook?" That's not "gobbledigook" -- it's technobabble!Star Trek had to invoke gobbledigook (the "Heisenberg Compensators") to get around this![]()

Johnathan
"Gobbledigook?" That's not "gobbledigook" -- it's technobabble!Star Trek had to invoke gobbledigook (the "Heisenberg Compensators") to get around this![]()
Heh: Create a magic "entangled foam" which fits in a coffin shaped device (since a coffin is about the right size for most folks), entangle that with a similar device, then transport the second device to wherever.
Then you just need to figure out how to entangle the foam on one end to yourself, and the second device to a "blank" on the other side.
Press the button and bang, you have some non-sentient goo on this side and (with luck) you emerge from the blank on the far side.
If we say that the full quantum copy is necessary to preserve consciousness, then we can have the blank be a copy accurate up to but not including the detailed quantum state.
Lots of magic, for sure. The coffin filled with foam seems to be a person sized ensemble of quantum bits, and we are struggling to make just a half dozen. Maybe copying the state of the nervous system would be sufficient? (But, that's still huge.)
Not sure if the basic mechanism is valid: Can you entangle B with C, then entangle A with B and C with D, then force the state of A to D? Applying natural language reasoning to "entangle" seems iffy.
Thx!
TomB
Eh, if that would work, it seems to create the possibility of faster-than-light travel. The notion of entanglement that I proposed must be wrong.
So really, what you are doing is entangling B & C, sending C somewhere else, and then entangling A & B, which forces C into the state of A. At least that's how it works for electrons and photons and the like.
And note that entanglement is not a permanent state for all time. You have to create the new entangled state without disrupting the old one.
Assume the technology dematerializes you, sends information to another location, and then you are reconstructed exactly the same - to the last atom - including all memories. Would you be happy to transport?
Is your answer the same if there is a slight delay between the copy being created and you being dematerialized. So you see your copy appear on the other side of the room, and then you are dematerialized?
For me, I can't help but view it as death. I've been disintegrated, and a clone of me is walking around in my place. It thinks it's me, but it's mistaken; it's a clone of me. And it's so good that nobody else can distinguish. Except I got disintegrated, and that's a copy of me.
That clone, though, in scenario #2 where a slight delay means it sees me in the original transporter booth just before I dematerialize, would know it's the copy. It would know that because it is standing in the destination booth and it's looking at me in the origin booth. In that case, the copy must feel weird knowing that it's a 5-second old copy of me, and that I'm dead.
What about you? It's an old debate, but I always enjoy it!
[video=youtube;pdxucpPq6Lc]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pdxucpPq6Lc[/video]
"Gobbledigook?" That's not "gobbledigook" -- it's technobabble!![]()
Not quite. "Technobabble" is techno-jargon that the listener can't understand, but may actually be accurate and correct. The difference between technobabble and normal use of jargon is the intent and audience - if you have two specialists talking about a subject, they're just using jargon. If they are knowingly using it in front of a layman to confuse or mislead, then it is technobabble.
The full term I was referring to is "pseudoscientific gobbledigook" which differs from technobabble in that it is guaranteed to have little or no accurate technical content![]()