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Es imposible comprender cabalmente el universo y la realidad sin una comprensión de la ciencia o teoría cuántica. Este artículo tiene dos propósitos: primero, presentar en qué consiste el procesamiento cuántico de la información, y luego también discutir, consiguientemente, las implicaciones de la cuántica para la comprensión de la realidad. Argumento que el mundo es plenamente cuántico, y que el mundo clásico es un caso límite del mundo cuántico. La base del argumento aquí es que la información cuántica puede ser vista como un fenómeno vivo. El procesamiento cántico de la información (PCI) ha sido principalmente objeto de explicaciones computacionales. Aquí, ésta es tomada como el modo en que la información permite una explicación del mundo que no es dualista. En este sentido, el (PCI) consiste en la comprensión acerca de cómo el entrelazamiento emerge como la base para una realidad coherente y sin embargo altamente dinámica, vibrante, vívida. La información, se argumenta aquí, es una visión relacional de entes, sistemas, fenómenos y eventos (Auletta, 2005).

Carlos Eduardo Maldonado, Universidad El Bosque

Profesor titular de la Universidad El Bosque. Ph. D. en Filosofía (KULeuven, Belgica).
Postdoctorados: como Visiting Scholar, University of Pittsburgh; como Visiting Research
Professor, Catholic University of America, (Washington, D. C.), como Visiting Scholar,
University of Cambridge. Área de estudio: ciencias de la complejidad.

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Received 2021-07-12
Accepted 2021-07-12
Published 2021-08-15