Skip to main content Start main content

Lecturer from Research Institute for Quantum Technology (RIQT)

 

Topic Overview:

Interdisciplinary approaches demand perspective-taking. Stepping into another discipline’s mindset requires adopting a distinct observer stance. Similar to quantum physics, where the system’s state may depend on the observation context, evaluating complex problems from multiple angles collapses them from superposed theoretical potentials into defined, actionable realities (e.g., a joint research publication). In this lecture, we discuss how interdisciplinarity broadens the analytical scope, that perspective-taking maps distinct informational frames, how observer stance structures the measurement context, and how calculating quantum probability models how multiple overlapping states actualise into an intersubjective decision that we then agree upon as reality – for the time being.

 

Key Topics:

  1. Explore how interdisciplinarity broadens the analytical scope of inquiry.
  2. Examine how perspective-taking helps map distinct informational frames.
  3. Understand how the observer’s stance shapes the measurement context.
  4. Discuss how quantum probability models multiple overlapping states.
  5. Consider how overlapping states may actualise into an intersubjective decision.
  6. Reflect on how agreed decisions can shape what people accept as reality—for the time being.

 

Teaching Format

Lecture and case studies

 

 Previous   Next

Your browser is not the latest version. If you continue to browse our website, Some pages may not function properly.

You are recommended to upgrade to a newer version or switch to a different browser. A list of the web browsers that we support can be found here