Minimum - Quantum Mechanics. The Theoretical
I needed to get out, but the door was behaving like a spin-up/spin-down experiment . Every time I turned the handle clockwise, the room shifted into a version of the lab where the door was welded shut. If I turned it counter-clockwise, I ended up in the hallway, but the hallway was now upside down.
The Schrödinger Equation governs how things change. It’s deterministic, predictable—until you touch it. I closed my eyes, letting the "unitary evolution" of the room carry me. I didn't fight the shifts. I didn't try to "measure" my position. I became a wave, spreading out across the lab, the hallway, and the parking lot outside.
When I finally opened my eyes, the world was singular again. The mug was just a mug. The door was just a door. But as I walked to my car, I didn't check the rearview mirror. I knew better than to look too closely at where I’d just been. Quantum mechanics. The theoretical minimum
I felt the "Theoretical Minimum" of my own existence: a heart rate, a memory of a friend, and the math that held the atoms of my body in a tightly bound dance .
I looked at the coffee mug on the table. It was full. It was empty. It was a ceramic shard embedded in the drywall. According to the notebook, these weren’t three different mugs. It was one "state," a complex superposition of possibilities. I reached for the handle. My hand passed through the steam of the full cup and gripped the cold porcelain of the empty one. I needed to get out, but the door
"It’s not everything," Art had told me before the accident. "It’s just what you need to survive. The bare essentials. The floor beneath which reality stops making sense."
The notebook was bound in cheap leather, the kind that smelled like old library basements. On the cover, Art had scrawled four words in permanent marker: THE THEORETICAL MINIMUM . The Schrödinger Equation governs how things change
This request appears to be inspired by the book Quantum Mechanics: The Theoretical Minimum by Leonard Susskind and Art Friedman.