Musings from a Cosmology of Light #45: Euler’s Lullaby — Cosmic Symphony Paradox

Pravir Malik
2 min readFeb 20, 2021

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Euler’s Beautiful Equation suggested an interpretation linking 0, 1, ‘i’, ‘e’, and ‘pi’ in a Cosmology of Light, and Euler’s formula (a part of Euler’s Identity) charts out ‘e’, ‘i’, and ‘pi’ (or an angle depicted as multiples of pi), as an endless wave.

The attraction of such an endless wave is that no matter how much the angle increases (depicted by the horizontal or x-axis above), the value as per Euler’s formula will always fall within a set upper and lower bound (depicted by the vertical or y-axis).

For many quantum physicists, this is perhaps utopia, because if the bounds are set between 0 and 1, then as per the accepted interpretation of quantum mechanics, the value always falling between 0 and 1, becomes a probability.

Voila! Euler’s formula now becomes the means by which any richness in terms of entanglement or superposition or any other quantum phenomenon that happens behind the veil, can be equated to some probabilistic outcome happily measured on the surface. Hence Euler’s Formula becomes a means to depict everything that goes on behind the quantum veil:

But in a Cosmology of Light, if the undulating wave is used as a probabilistic mechanism only, it becomes nothing other than a lullaby that veritably coaxes the aspiring explorer into a state of sleep.

Instead, as suggested by Euler’s Beautiful Equation, the undulating wave is not a probability function, but rather, is constantly connecting possibility in antecedent layers of Light with the layer where Light travels at speed c. Nothing that happens in the material layer (where light travels at c) can be determined without the arbitration between layers suggested by the action of the undulating wave.

This constant arbitration, following a fourfold enrichment, reveals therefore an ever more full cosmic symphony. Seeing it as so changes the way quantum phenomenon is interpreted and has profound implications for quantum computation, and a host of technologies that are in turn imagined to exist on that.

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Pravir Malik
Pravir Malik

Written by Pravir Malik

A view of the world through light and fractals

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