1. Letters to David Baker; 2. Letters to Howard Baker; 3. Letters to Howard Barnum; 4. Letters to Paul Benioff; 5. Letters to Charlie Bennett; 6. Letters to Herb Bernstein; 7. Letters to Doug Bilodeau; 8. Letters to Gilles Brassard; 9. Letters to Jeffrey Bub; 10. Letters to Carlton Caves; 11. Letters to Greg Comer; 12. Letters to Charles Enz; 13. Letters to Henry Folse; 14. Letters to Bob Griffiths; 15. Letters to Adrian Kent; 16. Letters to Rolf Landauer; 17. Letters to Hideo Mabuchi; 18. Letters to David Mermin; 19. Letters to David Meyer; 20. Letters to Jeff Nicholson; 21. Letters to Michael Nielsen; 22. Letters to Asher Peres; 23. Diary of a carefully worded paper: more letters to Asher Peres; 24. Letters to John Preskill; 25. Letters to Joseph Renes; 26. Letters to Mary Beth Ruskai; 27. Letters to Rüdiger Schack; 28. Letters to Robert Schumann; 29. Letters to Abner Shimony; 30. Letters to Jon Waskan; 31. Letters to Bill Wootters; 32. Letters to Anton Zeilinger; 33. Other letters; Index.
A passionate account of the early days of quantum information and computing from one of the most penetrating modern thinkers.
Christopher A. Fuchs is a Visiting Professor at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Waterloo, Canada. Formerly a Lee DuBridge Prize Fellow at the California Institute of Technology and a winner of the prestigious E. T. S. Walton Award, Science Foundation Ireland, he was recently elected Vice Chair for the American Physical Society Topical Group on Quantum Information, to become Chair in 2011.
'… a real page turner … the book offers food for thought, and
plenty of leads for further reading (or research), mixed with
memorable quotes … it entangles the reader with the strange and
beautiful world that hides behind the one we live in.' Nature
Physics
'I'm delighted that what Chris Fuchs calls his 'samizdat' … has
finally been published in book form. I read the samizdat as a
beginning graduate student, and it changed my career … reading
Chris's letters made me feel, for the first time, like the great
conversation of Bohr, Einstein, and other luminaries in the 1920s
was still going on today.' Scott Aaronson, Massachusetts Institute
of Technology
'Anyone interested in grabbing a front seat to a new way to see
quantum theory, as debated by the author and luminaries of quantum
information and quantum foundations, will find this book hard to
put down. As a bonus the book brims over with an overwhelming sense
of joy and wonder at our quantum universe that, when combined with
a wicked sense of humor, will no doubt make this collection of
correspondences a classic document of the now blossoming age of
quantum information science.' Dave Bacon, University of
Washington
'Full of humor, vivid characters, and intellectual drama … A window
into physics in the process of being untangled, this rich email
tapestry is the fin de siècle testament to Heisenberg's dictum that
'science is rooted in conversations'. … My much-annotated and
coffee-stained copy sits not on my bookshelf but on my desk, and I
still stumble over new delights.' Louisa Gilder, author of The Age
of Entanglement
'Nobody today writing about quantum mechanics combines poetry and
analysis to better effect than Chris Fuchs … The death of letters
as a high literary form brought about by the telephone turns out to
have been only a lengthy coma - a 20th century aberration … The
thought-provoking pages that follow, which can either be read like
a Nabokov novel, or dipped into from time to time, like a
collection of poems or short stories, gloriously provide a 21st
century demonstration that the art form is again alive and well -
and also, of course, that there remain profound questions to ask
and to strive to answer about the real meaning of quantum
mechanics.' N. David Mermin, from the Foreword
'No-one has done more to articulate the information-theoretical
interpretation of quantum theory than Fuchs … For both physicists
and philosophers alike, this book will entertain, inform and almost
certainly challenge.' Gerard Milburn, University of Queensland
'In this marvellous collection of letters we get to watch over
Chris Fuchs's shoulder as he wrestles with one of the great open
scientific problems of today: how should we understand quantum
theory? … It's also a pleasure to read, personable, funny, and with
a stimulating turn of phrase on nearly every page.' Michael
Nielsen, co-author of Quantum Computation and Quantum
Information
'Anyone fascinated by the mysteries of the quantum world is sure to
be enlightened and entertained by this extraordinary collection, in
which Chris wrestles with some of the deepest questions about how
we describe Nature. You have never read a physics book like this
one.' John Preskill, Richard P. Feynman Professor of Theoretical
Physics, California Institute of Technology
'… this book … is unique. There is really nothing like it out there
… the main reason a physicist should read the book is that Fuchs is
a very philosophically minded thinker, who is deeply concerned with
the question of why we need quantum mechanics … a good read … you
continually come across passages that make you stop and say 'Hmm,
let me think about that!' And you put the book down and are soon
lost in thought. What could possibly be better?' American Journal
of Physics
'… this book is indeed a gem. It is certainly recommended reading
for anyone in the field of quantum information: as Mermin puts it
in the foreword, 'Chris Fuchs is the conscience of the field'.'
Eric Cavalcanti, Quantum Information Processing
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