David Ding: Regeneration

The Nature of Quantum

David Ding Season 2 Episode 29

Send me a text

Embark on an intellectual journey with through the complex intersections of quantum theory, trinity, and ternary thinking. What if I told you that adopting a paradoxical approach to understanding these phenomena could lead to a perpetually wealth-generating system?

Tune in to discover the pivotal role of pressure points in time and space, accentuating how phenomena like lightning strikes can be a gateway to understanding quantum behavior.

Further on, I decipher the obscure concept of infinity and how it's articulated through binary, wrapped in a mutable entity in time and space. I delve into the mesmerising state of plasma created by lightning strikes, and how it offers an insight into the behavior of infinity. Get ready to challenge the linear notion of time that often acts as a roadblock to materialising our will, and discover how quantum principles can empower us to overcome this barrier.

Lastly, I explore the significance of trust in shaping a safe and meaningful life. Have you ever pondered on the rising concept of trustless systems and how we as humans are instinctively inclined to put our faith in these systems? Join me as I make sense of this narrative, discussing how the quality of our interactions can unlock an abundance of opportunities for innovation and mutually benificial dependency.

Stay with me as I explore the delicate balance between centralised and distributed systems, and the harmony that trust can create within them. Together, let's delve into how the confluence of heart and mind can drive a system of perpetual motion, the ultimate wealth-generating system.

Support the show

Contact David Ding

Thanks for listening!

Speaker 1:

Okay. So this one is about the nature of quantum. So this is going to be quantum from my perspective, rather than some scientific explanation and really meaning. What does quantum mean to me, viewed at through the lens of Trinity or ternary thinking? Meaning that if we are to look at what quantum means and where to understand the principles of quantum behaviour, what does that look like from a ternary perspective or from the perspective of Trinity? So, to preface this, I've been some of you already know I've developed a blueprint and a method for problem-solving or system design using the principles of ternary thinking. It's called Trinity and it's a way of creating an over-unity system or a system that is perpetually wealth generating Give me a plight to software and hardware systems. But it utilises paradox. So you're perpetually seeking to leverage the potential of paradox whereby every truth within that system, every reality, is also true from the opposite perspective and seemingly contrasting perspective. So it has to make sense in binary and it has to make sense in infinity, from a singular perspective and from a dualistic perspective. Now those things are seemingly conflicted, but in truth there is space for everything to coexist simultaneously, without conflict and in perpetuity. So I'm working on a Trinity is really about a proof of principle that I'm working on.

Speaker 1:

In science. If a scientist comes across something fundamentally new in terms of that challenge, as a current law of known physics or any form of science, then the beginning of that process is really a to develop a proof of principle. Can I replicate this in within reality, to demonstrate the principle in nature and from there you would then, you know, apply it in some form of concept. So you develop a concept and then you know, based on whatever assumptions you have to make, scientists typically what they do is when they have a conjecture about a new principle, they're perpetually seeking to refute that conjecture until they're actually looking for evidence that refutes their conjecture. And when they haven't actually, when they cannot find evidence that it's not true, that's when they move it forward and that's that's the brilliance of a scientific mind, is they're relentless in their pursuit of failure. They're trying to seek failure and if they can't, they're like well, this is fundamentally true. So, in the same way that this has been my approach and in the context of Trinity or ternary thinking, I cannot find evidence of this not being true, and I've searched for evidence in the natural world and I've seen evidence of it taking place, however, without the, without experimentation, you know, without measuring and proving and stuff like that. So so the reason I want to dive into quantum is because quantum holds the key to understanding the principle that I'm about to share with you. And so, if you so, let's begin there.

Speaker 1:

So quantum, if you think about the essence of the word quantum, it's really derived from the word quantity. So a quantum is something that can be measured, something that can be captured. And when we talk about quantum behavior, you know, we typically think about, you know, tiny little packets of information that can be measured. But then when we look at quantum behavior and we look at the nature of superposition, where something can take on multiple positions, positions in linear time and space simultaneously, then kind of, you know, that's where kind of things start falling apart. You're kind of like, well, how, what? How is that possible? And so Trinity explains this as a principle.

Speaker 1:

So quantum, if you imagine? So the principle is that infinity is the nature of all existence, it's the fabric of all existence. There's no beginning, there's no end, it is a singularity, it is a singular perspective and it is all-encompassing, and it contains everything and nothing and everything in between, so it is the full gamut of possibility, probability, potentiality, but it is devoid of motion. So there is zero emotion, there is zero point, there's zero fixed point time and space. It's pure just, isn't it? And so, in that scenario, you cannot measure anything, there's nothing to measure, there's no quantum, there's no packet of information that that I can measure, because there's no point, there's zero point, there's very fixed point of time and space. So how can I, how can I measure something that doesn't have linearity, that doesn't exist in three dimensions or even two dimensions, and this is the beauty of binary.

Speaker 1:

So, if you imagine so, if I'm gonna take you through a physical example of how, of how quantum comes into existence, so if you are to say to you just sit, just sit where you are and bring your awareness inside your body, and to concentrate on a fixed point within your body, whether it's one of your organs or whether it's just a position inside your body, you know you might choose your abdominals, you might choose your shoulder, you might choose a finger, and then so you close your eyes and you devote your awareness to that fixed point within your collective body. So you're, you're consciously imagining linear time and space and you're focusing all of your awareness on that fixed point. So, to guide you through the the process of unfoldment of infinity, imagine just being pure awareness. So you've just closed your eyes and you are not fixed on any point in time and space, it's just pure isness. You're in a total state of awareness. You're not focusing on anything in particular, you're just there.

Speaker 1:

Now you bring your awareness to your fingertip and you focus all of your energy on a fixed point in time and space, which is your fingertip, and you'll notice pressure. You'll notice pressure. So as the pressure builds, you continue to focus on it, builds and pressure grows. And pressure. So you're constraining your awareness to a fixed point in time and space. You're intentionally imbuing it, willing it into three dimensions. You see, so this is the beginning of quantum.

Speaker 1:

So imagine now, imagine now, over eons of time, or maybe not even that long the awareness of infinity. In the beginning it had zero awareness of a fixed point time and space. Then, at some moment, it became aware that it could focus its awareness on a single point, fixed point in time and space. Pressure builds and builds and builds over time, but they stay, don't break focus. It remains consciously aware of applying pressure to a fixed point, time and space. Now, what do we know about pressure? We know that the state of absolute pressure produces plasma, it produces a sun, so some form of Sun.

Speaker 1:

Now, if you, let's say, you know, as an example, in the desert, totally dry, completely dry, and you know kind of it's imagined tornado valley in the States, it's really dry for a significant, significant part of the year and when the soil is not tilled it becomes very dry and brittle and extremely stagnant. Now, within that stagnation it's impossible for ionization to happen, that's, there's no circulation, there's no circulation of ions. So in that scenario, high pressure builds in those areas, as if there were some form of awareness focusing its attention upon where there is no zero movement. And when the pressure builds and builds and builds, then we have lightning, lightning strikes, ionization occurs and there's rapid movement and circulation of ions. In the same way, if you're sitting at your desk for a long period of time, then you're compressing your body and then the ions aren't moving through your body. You stand up out of your chair and you have stiffness, you have stagnation, and the solution is movement, your movement, and then Circulation can happen and take place.

Speaker 1:

But nonetheless, if you were sitting in In a stagnant state and there was zero motion Taking place, then inevitably what will happen is pain, you know, like a shot of pain, like a nerve pain, like a bolt of lightning and, at the end of the day, the, the reason why that lightning, that bolt, that sharpness of pain takes place in almost zero time Is because there's a, there's a limit, there's a ceiling To how much stagnation can take place and how much pressure there can be Within a fixed point in time and space before motion has to take place. Because there is no. You know, energy is in a constant state of flux. It can't remain stagnant. So in a, within a state of absolute pressure, this is where we see lightning strikes and it creates motion. And if you are a Human being and you get nerve pain and that nerve pain shoots, what happens? You jump, you jump in an instant and then you, you're forced to move, and then you move and then there is motion again.

Speaker 1:

So let's go back to quantum now. So a packet. So what is a quantum? Well, if you look at a photon as an example, a Photon is a packet of infinity, it's binary infinity, it is the potential, it is pure potentiality, which is then, which is the essence of infinity, but it's in binary because it's, it's contained within a packet and therefore it can Move through time and space. So if you imagine that a photon is really the result of concentrated awareness Originating within infinity and Birthed into binary so that it can exist in three dimensions, so there we have a quantum, a packet, we have something that can be measured and and the nature of infinity can express itself in binary, within three dimensions, which is profound.

Speaker 1:

When you think about the purely stagnant state of infinity, again remembering close your eyes, you're in pure darkness. You're not focusing on any fixed point in time and space. There's zero point. When you willfully focus, focus on a point, fixed point in time and space, pressure builds. If that pressure reaches an absolute state of absolute pressure, then lightning strikes and Motion occurs. And so if you consider infinity that is devoid of motion, then what do you have when you have energy in motion? You have emotion, you have a motion. Now Some may argue that a photon or packet of infinity, you know, a wave Contained within a fixed point in time and space, is the beginning, but in truth it is the plasma that is the beginning, the lightning that strikes, that, that that is revealed through the state of absolute pressure.

Speaker 1:

That is the first substance. So you, in truth, that state of plasma is the primordial state. So electricity Really electricity is is the state of infinity in motion and Everything from there is Disintegrated plasma. So, from infinity, once we reach a state of absolute pressure and a fixed point in time and space, then plasma creates energy and and motion. So it is disintegrated. Infinity, that's what plasma is, and Then it's a perpetual state of stepping itself down and down and down, fragmenting itself In perpetuity. So the nature of reality is that matter is disintegrated, infinity. Plasma is disintegrated infinity. Light is disintegrated plasma, matter is disintegrated light. And here we have the stepping down of infinity into binary and we can measure it. So quantum in this, in this context, I Want to now focus on quantum behavior.

Speaker 1:

You know the nature of super superposition is a phenomenal thing, and so if you zoom out into the perspective of infinity, you know college, your eyes become aware that you are infinity. It's just black, zero, fixed point in time and space. And now observe reality in front of you. So you're witnessing reality in binary, in Two dimensions. You're witnessing all of reality in two dimensions in your mind's eye, but with your eyes closed, then you, you notice that you become constrained, you notice that time becomes a major constraint and Time really becomes a major deterrent from enacting your will. So you may witness Pressure, applied pressure, within time and space, within linear time and space, within three dimensions, and you know all of the things that come with pressure. You know pain, suffering, of course, innovation, you know adversity and you know how nature takes care of this is through shock.

Speaker 1:

If something remains stagnant for too long, then a shock, some form of shock To the system is applied, so that emotion, so that motion is imbued into Time. Points in time and space where there is so much pressure that stagnation is Occuring. And of course that's not the nature of energy. It's nature is that it's in a perpetual state of flux and so something as a aspect of nature has to disrupt it's its patterned behavior to create motion where there is stagnation, and so linear time Becomes a pain in the bum. Now, if you're infinity, you don't want to, you know you can you can see things happening, you can see nature unfolding and time becomes a barrier, and so the solution is is quantum behavior, and this is how Infinity Dissolves the barrier that time creates Time and truly the nature of infinity. Its superpower is the ability to collapse the axis of time. So a human being, looking through your two eyes, you know.

Speaker 1:

And let's bring it into context. Let's say, in my job, in my day-to-day job, last week we had a three-day sprint, a design sprint, and it's basically the process of ideating and slowly constraining it to time and space and creating a linear path Towards. You know, executing projects that lead to a thing, that lead us to standing up a concept, then going through the motions of proving that concept, etc. And that's very linear. That's very linear and it is dependent. So it was. We were fixed to two, three days, it that the sprint took three days and Every and the end result was wholly dependent upon everything that preceded that, you know, series of exercises and and activities. They were all constrained to time. So we've got 15 minutes for this, we've got eight minutes for that, we've got five minutes minutes for that, and, don't get me wrong, we're it works well.

Speaker 1:

But there is an alternative From the infinite perspective. Then it is possible to go straight from the beginning to the end and leapfrog at all, and this is where we have superposition. This is where we have superposition, and From the infinite perspective. So this is how you would, this is how you would collapse the axis of time is that? So you close your eyes, you're in darkness again, you're not focusing on any fixed point in time and space.

Speaker 1:

And so then you focus on a fixed point in time and space that will collapse the axis of time, and you apply pressure, magnetization, and this is the, this is the, this is the superpower of applied pressure. When we create a vacuum, in a state of absolute pressure, then it is power, profoundly magnetic. And if you look at a black hole, where the you know, the most gravity exists anywhere, the magnetization of that is profound. And so pressure has, has a quality that is attractive in nature it draws your attention. The more you focus your attention on a fixed point in time and space, the more gravity it develops and the more attention it cultivates and it becomes like a, you know like a vortex, drawing everything in, drawing in the attention, drawing in light or particles of. You know like vibration, and this is how all of existence works, is how all of existence works, and we know that quantum behavior, we know that particles are popping into and out of existence all the time, forming superpositions, and those superpositions are determined by attention.

Speaker 1:

What we are focusing on is what is drawing our attention. We're focusing on facebook, that's what's drawing our attention. If you're focusing on tiktok, that's what's drawing our attention. And so it's kind of like a chicken and egg scenario. We think that Compulsive behavior or addiction, or, you know, chasing dopamine, is the cause, and, of course, that's definitely a powerful element of this. But it's really a decision, it's our will, it's a, it's a choice to to Focus our attention upon a single fixed point in time and space the application on our phone that that is drawing our attention, it's that's compelling us To continually focus on it and focus on it and focus on it. And so, in that scenario, what do you do when you know, based on the principles I've explained Up to this point, what is the solution?

Speaker 1:

What we've done is we've created these centralized, fixed points in time and space, let's say a monolithic company like tiktok or facebook, and they've become like these black holes that are Compelling us towards them, drawing our attention and growing in power. Well, what nature would do Is, once that pressure builds and builds, and builds To the point of stagnation, and you can sense that a lot with facebook at the moment it's kind of like the same thing on rinse and repeat and even though there is motion within it, it's a stagnant, very stagnant pattern of scrolling and liking and commenting and the same comments on rinse and repeat and the same emojis, the same videos trying to capture your attention. Attention, attention, attention, attention. It's just devouring attention. It's a machine. It's become a black hole. So, and the space in between interactions is becoming less and less. We see this with youtube and the average, the average amount of time spent watching a youtube video I'm sure in the beginning Maybe it was around 15 minutes, eight minutes, five minutes, three minutes, two minutes.

Speaker 1:

And now with tiktok, you know, is the manifestation of our desire of, of the power Of our attention to collapse the axis of time. You see, the space in between interactions it's becoming less and less and less. It's moving towards becoming a singularity, because the less space there is in between interactions, the closer you are to infinity or to a singularity, to a, to a black hole. So what's, what does nature do in that scenario? We know what it does Intense, powerful disruption in zero time, smack, lightning strikes. The stagnation of that singularity, the stagnation of it Reaches a tipping point where it will be disrupted, to create motion and to circulate and to recirculate that stagnation so that it moves. And we're so. We're seeing this in reality now. We're seeing the decentralization of everything. We're seeing the decentralization of everything, and what I can tell you is an innovation advisor working in the digital space Web 3, ai, blockchain, dows, alternative currencies this is what's coming. This is what's coming. You know, there are viable platforms now, some of them emerging in New Zealand, that are extremely potent, are extremely potent and have the potential to seriously disrupt, to seriously disrupt, and so it's inevitable at this point. And so you can say the same thing about governance. You know the government. You know, in the web 3 space, there are lots of people who are quite. They want to disrupt for the sake of disruption, and I'm not On board with that. You know, I work for a government agency. I I believe that Every solution is Um, um Is a state of temperance whereby human beings have the power to choose what they want for themselves, rather than you know one faction determining that it's.

Speaker 1:

It's best for all human beings to have it this way, because total decentralization of authority doesn't work for people with disabilities, if you can only blink, and that's the only way you can express yourself in the world Using morse code, by blinking. To communicate, you have to be able to defer all of your authority. If you have to be sovereign, then you you can't live in the world. You need 99.9% of your existence needs to be. You have to be dependent. So independence it doesn't work for everyone.

Speaker 1:

You know there are human beings that want to be able to defer all of their authority to artificial intelligence because they don't trust human beings. Now, some of some of you might balk at that and go that's insane, but Nothing is more intelligent than super intelligence. The reason we don't trust it is because it was. It's built based on human nature and if you look at a trustless system, many people try to build trustless systems so that we can trust it to do remote surgery and control swarms of digital and physical assets Like a hive mind swarm. The thing that makes it trustless is that it's rendered Human intermediaries obsolete. There's that no human being has is able to interact with the system. That is wholly intelligent and self-organizing, based on deterministic judgments, based on verifiable interactions stored on chain.

Speaker 1:

And you know, in this scenario and this is this is what's really important If you trust that, an AI singularity on a system like that? If you trust it, then you're going to defer your authority to it. It's just that simple. In the same way you trust the website where you do your banking, you trust that there's not a human being that's going to access your passwords and try and Access your bank account. So we think we need to be able to trust something absolutely, but the reality is is that we all have a risk profile and there's inherent risk in everything. Nothing is entirely devoid of risk, and so if you use internet banking, you're taking a risk every day. You're not demanding that it's completely, completely trustworthy. You're taking a risk. But what you trust is that if someone Does empty your bank account because they've stolen your credentials, you trust that the banks can compensate you. So this is how it works. But when you have a system that is so that you can depend on so entirely that you believe is benevolent, and then you know there are mechanisms, you know that your transactions are being underwritten, but there are no human beings involved, you have a trustless system, and you will be, whether you realise it or not. You will feel safe deferring your authority to it. You will feel safe, deferring your authority to that system. It's human nature. Trust just happens, it just unlocks the willingness to let go and receive help.

Speaker 1:

And this is really where I wanted to get to with this podcast episode is, in terms of quantum, is that you are singular and you are binary. You are infinite and you are limited. You are a living, breathing paradox. Every perspective that exists within the full gamut of perception Is valid from its unique perspective. You are innocent and you are guilty. So, understanding that that you are sovereign and you are also powerless. You have total control and you have no control. So your natural state, your infinite state, your primordial state, is infinite, absolute sovereignty, total sovereignty. But you have to be able to.

Speaker 1:

If you want to experience life and if you want to participate in life, you need to become dependent upon somebody, somebody else other than you, because eventually you'll come to realize that life is, the meaning of life, is the richness of your interactions. It's about the richness of your interactions, meaning the diversity and the uniqueness. And once you understand this and you begin to live your life trying to enhance the richness of the interactions, first of all, you're going to try and create opportunities to have interactions more frequently and you're going to, you're going to naturally seek to make the nature of those interactions as interdependent as you can. So you want the maximum potential diversity within those interactions so that the richness of the interaction is enhanced. Because the more you expose yourself to uniqueness especially uniqueness that is polarized from you, that is opposite or even paradoxical the richer you become, the richer your life becomes, and this is really what wealth is. This is really what wealth is. And so if we now bring in the perspective of focusing where you focus your attention, if you can have a mindset shift, where you're focusing your attention on the richness of your interactions, the diversity and the interdependency of each interaction, then that's where you are applying a pressure and that is what is drawing the attention of everybody else.

Speaker 1:

If your focus is on distributed diversity so I just want to say that again if you're focusing your attention on distributed diversity and you understand that the sheer volume of opportunities to interact is a key component of that, and then the ability to capitalize on those transactions for the purpose of innovation, you've got this is the key to life. You've got the key to life. Now I work for a government agency and I'm a bit of a square pig in a round hole, in that I'm always trying to create ways to have more interactions, for no reason other than to enhance the richness of my own life. And so we've got you know, there's a common perception that, oh, you need to say no, you need to know when to say no. Well, that's not how infinity works. From the perspective of infinity, it's trying to perpetually create more. Increase your capability and your capacity to say yes.

Speaker 1:

If your bandwidth is the limitation, it's infinite. It can use superposition. There's infinite space, there's infinite time, and so this is the beauty of delegated authority. And this is where and this is really where my hope that people who are involved in the web-free space, who are trying to decentralize everything, is, they understand that there's an aspect of your nature that wants to delegate your authority. It wants to centralize it, it wants to surrender power, it wants to give its power away so that it can enhance the richness of its interactions. So how does sovereignty interplay with that? It's by understanding that you know you can clean your house, you know you have the ability to tidy your own house, but do you want to? What is, how rich are your interactions if you're standing firm in that? I'm sovereign, I'm independent, so I'm gonna clean my own house. There's nothing noble about that. You have. If you have the bandwidth, the capability and the capacity to seek greater richness of interactions in your life, why are you sacrificing bandwidth? You've already proven to yourself, you know how to clean a house. You actually want to give away the power to clean your house to someone that wants to have that authority for someone that wants to take on the responsibility and be appreciated for sharing their gifts with you.

Speaker 1:

Same in business, same in business, the solopreneur, classic archetype in the New Zealand ecosystem. So in the New Zealand innovation ecosystem. So this is really where I want to hone this in on is that New Zealanders and this is my observation, my perspective New Zealanders go so far down rabbit holes. We, the innovators that I work with on a day-to-day basis, founders of Frontier Innovation they go so far down rabbit holes. They've all done their 10,000 hours. They're all absolute authorities on their topic. There's no science you're gonna find anywhere in the world to validate what they've discovered and but they have ton of vision Now. But that's the sacrifice, right, like with Infinity, if you want to focus on a fixed point in time and space, to create pressure and to create gravity and movement, then in motion, then what you're sacrificing is all the other points in time and space. So if you want to do your 10,000 hours or a million hours, whatever you want to do, and go down your rabbit hole, then the depth that you're able to go is because of the sacrifice of everything outside of that tunnel. You see.

Speaker 1:

So now imagine myself as an innovation advisor. I have a portfolio of founders all working on stuff, all gone way down their rabbit holes with profound breakthroughs, but they've all gone through a tunnel. They're not aware of anyone else around them, they're not aware of interactions that, if were made possible, would be able to create something utterly extraordinary. And so what we have is we have an innovation ecosystem that's been designed to turn someone whose nature wants to go down rabbit holes and plot new courses and blaze new trails, and the innovation ecosystem is trying to turn someone that wants to go down a rabbit hole into a generalist. Now, why would you want to turn someone whose nature is the complete opposite of being a generalist? Why would you want to turn them into something that they are not? Now, if you're a founder, and you're an extremely technical founder, and you go down rabbit holes and you're so intelligent and smart that no one can understand what you're saying. And now the innovation ecosystem is forcing you to become an expert in capital raises, funding, finance, commerce, leadership, but you're a product champion. Now this is how we approach it. This is how we approach it. If you're a fund, you need to de-risk your investment. You're looking for a diehard founder, someone who's going to sacrifice it all to be successful, when, in reality, what's actually going to make that venture successful is a generalist, a generalist who is as vested as the founder. And you know one of my colleagues. I talk to him often about this and we talk about what we see as the gaps into the capability gaps. In the New Zealand ecosystem. It's a CEO and a COO, and probably a CPO, a chief product officer, those kind of archetypes.

Speaker 1:

If the Trinity well, let's not use that term, the three of those components is like the head, and if you think of how I envisage it and this is how I build software platforms as well, using the Trinity system is that it's you make it headless. So if you've created a business or you've built innovation or technology, you've built it from the heart. You've built it from the heart and from the soul. That's what's driven it, not commerce. Not commerce, they're feelings and sensations in your body. You've been compelled to act in a specific way. Your curiosity has guided you down this rabbit hole and you've been so courageous that you've just dived in.

Speaker 1:

Now, all of a sudden, someone's telling you you have to become something completely different in you in order to succeed. And that's true. But you need the head, you need the combination of the head and the heart, but you want to allow the heart to be the heart and you want to allow the head to be the head. And the head, for me, from my perspective, is fractional. Well, it doesn't have to be fractional, but, you know, for a startup, fractional is ideal fractional CEO, fractional CPO, and so then you've got the head following the heart, the head follows the heart. The head doesn't govern, it executes. Now, it obviously informs the heart, but it doesn't govern, it doesn't rule. And this is why, if you look at founders, the founders are the heart. They're the heart of the organization. So if you want to be heart led as an organization, it has to be founder led.

Speaker 1:

The impact that you're hoping to make with your innovation, that's something from within you, it's up to you, but often what we see is it becomes head led, commerce led, driven by money, driven by commerce, but in truth the symbiosis of both of those things working together as one is the ideal state. And so you know, from my perspective, when you have heart led, organizations, founder led, then you have a surrogate head, a temporary head, fractional head, plunked on CEO, coo, cpo, to deliver product market fit, run the Alpha and Beta testing, commercialise, raise capital, get all the agreements sorted, bring things to market, begin the iterative process, implement an operating model and establish a critical path. Like the critical path that is not deviated from and then innovation happens on the side, never disrupts the critical path. When you have an operating model that can be transplanted into, you know if it's stage gated and you're bringing investment in upon the achievement, upon the accomplishment of a specific mission like, let's say, it's an increase in valuation from A to B, you have the exit for your early stage founders, for your friends and family, raise, they have a yield, the cap table gets cleared for an investor with a bigger appetite, but you have a framework in place that's heart led, it's founder led, it's founder led. You have the head, the temporary head, the fractional head, can then be transitioned and you can hire full time CEO, coo, cpo, and between the three of them they should have the ability to build a team around them that scales over time.

Speaker 1:

So, really, this is really the essence of why I wanted to talk about this topic of quantum is to bring us to the understanding that the ideal state is a symbiosis of both binary and infinity. The heart is infinite. The heart is never ending. It is unconditional curiosity. It's unconditional, it's not dependent, it's not deterministic, it's non deterministic. In fact, it's random.

Speaker 1:

You know, if I see a bird flying past and it's beautiful and emotion is evoked, why, I don't know, I have no clue. But in fact, and even more than that, I don't care. I don't care why. It just is, and that is why trying to force a founder to justify their curiosity will never happen, to justify the reason why they're expressing their love into their creation, and ask them, why Show them how? Show them how? It doesn't matter, doesn't matter why, it doesn't matter why I found that bird beautiful. All that matters is that it is. This is what it is and this is what I can bring to the table as a virtual CEO, as a virtual CEO, as a virtual, doesn't matter why.

Speaker 1:

And once we can understand the nature of you, know what separates a founder from an executive. Now, of course, there are hybrids of both. There are founders who make wonderful executives, but execution is literally binary. It's like it's quantum. Your emotion guides you to create, to innovate, to build, to develop, to orchestrate, to move stuff around non-deterministically. And then execution is binary. It's the packet of infinity. It's measurable, it's tangible, it's linear. We do this. It means that once that's done, it then means we can do this, and once we've done that, it means we can then do that Linear. But innovation Innovation is non-deterministic. And so, to put the cherry on top and to seal this now Imagine yourself as infinity again.

Speaker 1:

So you close your eyes, you're in total blackness, you're not focusing your awareness onto a fixed point in time and space. Now you imagine reality as it is in your mind's eye and you look at reality and it's a 2D image, so it's polarized. You can witness the expression of your nature in binary in your mind's eye. What you actually want is you want to allow the full gamut of both aspects of your nature the aspect of your nature that is binary and also infinite, you see, because binary is part of infinity, it's not separate to it, and so the superpower of Trinity is a symbiotic relationship between binary and infinity, expressing itself as a perpetual motion system.

Speaker 1:

So infinity expressing itself in binary, so that it demonstrates the characteristics of infinity such as you know, it lasts forever, it's never ending, it's invincible, it's immutable, infinite possibility, infinite potential. It has to be a system, a wealth generating system, and that's created by having absolute and total separation and then the interweaving of those separate base components and elements back into something that becomes singular because of the interdependencies between each base element. So it's wholly binary, totally binary but interwoven in a way that, where the gestalt of those interactions is producing an over unity system, meaning that the system, whether it's an organization, a software platform, a hardware system, it means that it is perpetually wealth generating, it is perpetuating motion. So there is no scenario within which stagnation can occur. And if stagnation does occur, then there's a vehicle and a mechanism for a lightning bolt or or a shock to the system that enforces motion to take place.

Speaker 1:

You see, and so if you bring all these components together, you can build an organization that is founder, led, meaning heart led, innovation led, and but it is also informed by the head. The head executes but the heart rules, the heart governs. And it is my belief that this is where this is the symbiotic state, where the decentralized space, whether it be DAOs or autonomous organizations that once they understand the benefits of centralization, binary as well as unity, once they come to appreciate the aspects of infinity and chaos and disorder in their ability, their capability to collapse the axis of time, then they come to understand that what's required when a creation or innovation comes to a head is that it is wholly divorced from the heart, so there's space in between that fully formed concept. It is surrendered to the head and then the heart. The head converts it into binary determinism, so a linear path. It establishes a critical path this, then that, then that, then that it can be constrained to time and space.

Speaker 1:

We can calculate that by executing this. It's going to take that long. Once we've done that, it means we can do that it is successfully being birthed out of the unknown, because that which is infinite is non-deterministic, so you can't measure it, it's not quantum, there's no quantity. So, unknown, you surrender out, from the unknown into the known. Only then can you constrain it to time and space deterministically, in a linear path, and commit to a specific date, because we know that if we have a three-day sprint, we're going to have a fully formed concept. We know that, you know, producing this in Python is going to take X-matter hours because it's been done before.

Speaker 1:

We're using everything that is known. We're not innovating anymore. We're making it real in binary, using tools, skills, processes that are known. We establish a critical path and nothing ever, is ever allowed to disrupt the critical path. So innovation can't come in and knock it off its tracks. Innovation happens within. You know that it, until it comes to a head, it's allowed to evolve non-deterministically. And it's not until a fully formed concept is divorced from the infinite and surrendered to the head that it can be committed to linear time and space.

Speaker 1:

So infinity it wants to be able to use randomness. It wants to be able to use randomness to transcend the limitations of time. If you are creating and you're ideating and innovating, you want to allow curiosity, ideas, randomness to be accommodated and allowed for and focused upon without determinism, without asking why. Why am I having this thought? Why am I having this feeling? Why am I curious about this thing? Why it has to remain wholly fluid in order for the infinite aspect of your nature to transcend the limitations of time. Because if you question why, then you're trying to make it linear, you're trying to justify it. And justification of something that is unknown is not only impossible, it's futile. And if you ever try to constrain something that is infinite and still fluid where it's still a stream, it's still formless. If you try to constrain that to linearity early, too early, it will miscarry. It's inevitable. Now, that's not to say that. And so here's the here's.

Speaker 1:

The key component to this working symbiotically is there has to be separation between the head and the heart. They have to operate as sovereign entities so the execution happens and innovation does not confuse matters. Same with innovation, that the head doesn't come and try and force the innovators to justify why they're innovating well, why this or why that, and do not seek to understand that which is not understandable. Until there is a beginning, a middle and an ending to that concept, that's when it's surrendered and the innovators divorce themselves from it wholly. What it becomes from that moment, in order to exist in linear time and space, is up to the executors. The head and heart are separate and symbiotic and this is how you create, over unity, a perpetually wealth generating system that has to accommodate the extremes of the full gamut of experience, of infinity and of binary, of limitation and the infinite and the gestalt of those two things working together as one produces, over unity, perpetual motion. And so there's more I want to go into on this topic and specifically, at some point I'm going to talk about applying these principles to running an economy whereby there's no stagnation of anything allowed and there's a hard limitation upon the accumulation of wealth and in the pooling of assets, so that there is an incentive to deploy or create, at least move, wealth around in the system so that there's never any stagnation.

Speaker 1:

And in context of the richness of the interaction being the key to life, the richness of our interactions with the environment, with people, with systems. If the richness of those interactions is the key to life, is the key to the richness of our life, then how can we create an economy that incentivizes us to focus our attention, to have tunnel vision, upon enhancing the richness of our interactions? And inherent in that is the desire or the will to create diversity, to create interdependency and to willfully delegate our authority to others, to surrender control to other human beings. But notice that this is distributed in nature. It's distributing authority, it's distributing power through the act of willfully surrendering that power. You see, so decentralization is not the same as distribution.

Speaker 1:

You can have something that is centralized but is also distributed and, in truth, really, that's where I see perfect harmony, existing, contained distribution and willful surrender because of trust. That's caused by trust, because when we trust, surrender just happens. If we truly believe someone is a benevolent intent, we recognize some uniqueness in their nature. That is something we don't recognize in ourselves and we wholly trust that person. Surrender just happens, it's not even a choice. It's not even a choice. So, yeah, that's where I'll leave it for now. Yeah, I will leave it there. That's it for now for the nature of quantum talk soon.

People on this episode