Google recently claimed that its new Willow quantum computing chip just proved the existence of "parallel universes." How is this possible and is it different from multiverse theory? Glenn and Stu discuss this incredible alleged discovery, as well as how the Willow chip was apparently able to solve a problem in 5 minutes that would have taken modern supercomputers 10 septillion years to solve. But at the same time, there's another incredible story that might be related: Bible sales have increased 22% year over year, especially print versions!
Transcript
Below is a rush transcript that may contain errors
GLENN: Hello, America.
Let me -- let me just refresh your memory, where we were on Monday. Where we were on Monday, with Willow. Which is a new computer chip from Google, that they just -- they just tested.
With the new quantum computer.
Two years ago, we talked about quantum computing, because it -- it could process 54, what are called cubits.
That was astonishing at the time.
And I read article after article, once you get over 100, it's going to be like -- you won't believe what this can do.
And we're at the very beginning.
Two years, we were at 54.
We're at 155 cubits.
Cubit is a way to open up.
I don't even know how to explain it.
The universe.
And test a theory, and -- and search for all answers.
At the same time.
So right now, we have to think linearly.
We have to think, okay.
Two plus two is one.
No!
Two plus two is two? No. Two plus two is three. No! Two plus two is four.
Yes!
Okay. So it's ones and zeros. It's either a yes or a no. It doesn't have to be. But that -- we don't have to go into that. Yes or no.
And it tests all of them vertically instead of linearly. Got it?
So they can -- it can come up with answers, like nobody's business. And it -- it works with quantum physics. Which, quantum physics -- everything breaks down with quantum physics.
Einstein said, God doesn't play dice.
Well, if quantum physics is true, perhaps he does. A little bit.
Because the -- what they're finding now, especially since Monday!
Is one thing. First, they can solve the most complex problem, that we have ever tried to solve.
I don't even know what it is.
I would like to ask that question.
But it took this new quantum computer five minutes, to solve a problem.
That would have taken our best supercomputer, 10 septillion years, to solve it.
Go through the -- it's million, billion, trillion.
STU: Trillion. Quadrillion.
Quintillion.
Septillion.
GLENN: Okay. That's a lot.
In fact, they describe it as vastly more than the age of the entire universe.
STU: Quite an understatement there.
GLENN: Yeah. How old is the universe, they think?
STU: The accepted one is 13.8 billion years.
GLENN: Okay. 13.8 billion years.
This is 10 septillion years.
Would have taken to solve this problem. With our supercomputer.
I would like to ask the question: What was the question?
And what is the answer?
And how do you know it's right?
All right.
So now, that happened on Monday.
They announced that on Monday. Now, the guy who is the head of willow.
The guy who is in charge. He's the founder and leader of the Google AI team.
He's a physicist. He said, the result. The high speed result, I'm quoting, lends freedom to the notion that quantum computation occurs in many parallel universes.
So -- I mean, you have to almost go to marvel to understand.
It's -- it's as if -- as if, when they put a question in, all the Spider-Man movies are stacked up on top of each other.
You know what I mean? Not the Spider-Man. You know, Spider-Man one, two, and three, with the same actor.
He's in one universe.
All the other ones with different actors. They're all happening at the same time.
Okay?
That's what it means for parallel universe.
And he says, it shows, that that's where the quantum computing is happening.
It's going -- it's actually opening up, and going into other universes.
It's fascinating. Do you want to hear why they think that, Stu?
GLENN: Sure.
GLENN: It's very nerdy, but it's really cool.
All right. So you know what a neutron and an electron does. Right? What does an electron do?
It circles. And it circles the neutron.
And the neutron, it -- reason why the electron circles it.
It acts as a force to keep the neutron in place.
Without the electron, it goes -- it just like explodes, and goes away.
STU: Okay.
GLENN: So you have to have the electron.
Going around it, to keep the neutron, in place.
The reason why they first came up with quantum physics, is the electron, when you observe it.
It disappears.
No. When you -- when you observe it, it's there.
When you don't observe it, it's there. And then not there.
There and not there.
There and not there.
And so it keeps going.
It just disappears.
STU: How do you know that?
GLENN: The energy.
The energy -- it's one of the other, if you observe or not.
I can't remember which.
It's been years.
The energy goes full, nothing.
Full nothing. Full, nothing.
And those nothing areas, the -- neutron should dissipate. Okay
What they thought, this is the theory. Is that it's actually flipping into several different universes, as it's going around to hold that neutron in place, in all these different universes.
Okay.
Crazy.
STU: This is really what they think.
Incredible.
GLENN: This is really what they think.
That's the theory!
So he's now saying, yep. This is had it proves that that theory, is where we're doing the computations.
In all these different universes.
STU: Hmm.
GLENN: Now, the problem is: Over the weekend, there was a massive nerd fight.
And another guy, who is an astrophysicist, Ethan Siegel. He says, that's ridiculous!
And the Google guy should know.
And he says, that has nothing to do with it.
Blah, blah, blah.
So there's a third fight on the -- can he said, parallel universe -- parallel universe, and multi-verse are very different.
Now, I don't even think Marvel can explain the difference.
I have no idea.
But that's the level of the nerd fight we're in.
However, here's what -- what's really cool is, at 54 cubits, okay?
So about half of what we have now, and don't ask me how this happened. I have no idea.
They opened some -- you know, a molecule. And they could measure it here.
And when it was turned on, or whatever.
I have no idea.
I'm sorry for everybody who is really past an eighth grade education.
I apologize here.
Your head will hurt.
They opened it somehow or thorough.
And they were observing it through Silicon Valley or wherever this is.
They opened the same one.
It appeared in London.
And they verified, that the changes they made in Silicon Valley. Were happening with the -- it's the same molecule.
And it was happening at the same time, someplace else. Isn't that nuts?
STU: What! Yes.
GLENN: They thought, at that time, at 54 cubits, they thought, that is going to lead us to the discovery of how to travel without airplanes and everything else.
STU: Instantaneous travel.
GLENN: Instantaneous travel. That would be incredible.
STU: Uh-huh. Yes!
GLENN: Okay.
So all of these things are coming up. Now, listen to this.
What they say is: This is such big news, because we're going to be able to solve some of the biggest problems.
Okay. I want to know what the first question. Are you interested in what the first question was?
That took that. Okay. I don't know what it is.
I'm sure it's just mathematical. But I don't know what it is. I would like to know. And do you think that these are our biggest problems?
When you have the most powerful, they're saying, it will tell us how to make batteries better.
Really? That's what we're going for.
We're going for, how batteries can be made better?
They said, also, it could -- it could further humanity by curing some diseases.
Some diseases?
STU: It could be big. It could be maybe --
GLENN: Yeah. I think that might be an understatement. You're opening all this up. Yep, we'll be able to drive for 400 miles. Maybe as much as 700 miles an hour.
Come on. Come on.
There's got to be something bigger than that.
So, anyway, as all of this is happening. And makes no sense. To anybody, I think, all of the scientists are even bluffing.
They don't know what they're talking about.
It makes no sense. Let me give you this story!
New sales data from BookScan shows that Bible sales have increased 22 percent through October of this year! Compared to the same period last year.
I don't know if you know this, Bible sales have been going down for maybe about 100 years. Went up 22 percent this year!
In the first ten months of the year, American -- Americans purchased 13.7 million Bibles. Which, Bibles now are on track to suppress -- to surpass last year's 14.2 million!
Here's why it matters.
Over the same period of time, print book sales, increased less than 1 percent.
So people are -- you can get it online.
People are actually going out and buying paper Bibles, for their house and their family.
At unheard of rates. When everywhere else, the Bible is going down.
Why is that happening?
Try to relate it to the first story, I just gave you.
Nothing makes sense!
STU: Hmm.
GLENN: Nothing makes sense in our world. You're like, I -- what?
STU: People are looking for foundational --
GLENN: They're looking for foundational truths.
The world is changing so rapidly. And nothing makes sense. This is really good news.
Seeing that, that's the first sign of -- of an awakening.
Where people get so disillusioned with things, they realize their lives, the country, war, science, everything is out of control!
There are no experts to listen to.
That you're like, okay. Maybe I should start listening to myself, and is there something bigger than me? That makes sense.
This is an extraordinarily good sign!
As the world makes less and less sense, the only way to solve this is a return to universal principles.
And -- and it will still -- I -- do you know that the Big Bang theory was developed by scientists? Developed by scientists, and they used it, at first, the religious people, used it at first, to say the Big Bang theory, proves God exists.
And so science at that time, accepted it for a little while.
Then they were, no, no, no. It doesn't prove -- it just started. And it started as, well, that's the way God created it.
So God lit a match. Happened to the Big Bang. That explains your expanded universe and everything else.
Now scientists use that, because they cut the original part of the theory out, that God lit the match.
And it leaves you with the question, I've asked a million times.
Right. Big Bang.
But what lit the match?
What was just before it?
Where did all of that come from?
Who started the fire?
That was part of the original Big Bang theory! God. And they conveniently axed that part, to now disprove God.
We don't know what the answers are. And with quantum computing, the world will look.
And science will look very different, very fast. But there are certain truths, that used to be self-evident.
That are eternal. And we're looking for them, in record numbers!