nabil audie
Architecture | interiors | project management
INTERACTION AND THE QUANTUM WORLD
The paradox and problems of a non-computable algorithm as in the device. Undefined mathematical equations are non computable because any action beyond a computer simulation is undefined or impossible but this means a toy model can be made out of it to explore or reuse its uncomputable models replacing equations. The real numbers are uncountable so most real numbers are not computable. The set of finitely functions on the natural numbers is uncountable so most are not computable. Concrete examples of such functions are Busy beaver, Kolmogorov complexity, or any function that outputs the digits of a non-computable number, such as Chaitin's constant. Similarly, most subsets of the natural numbers are not computable. The Halting problem was the first such set to be constructed. The Entscheidungs problem, proposed by David Hilbert, asked whether there is an effective procedure to determine which mathematical statements (coded as natural numbers) are true. Turing and Church independently showed in the 1930s that this set of natural numbers is not computable. According to the Church–Turing thesis, there is no effective procedure (with an algorithm) which can perform these computations.
USING THE PRINCIPLE OF THE NON COMPUTABLE ALGORITHM IN SPACE
Since computers can only do what they are programmed to do and programs are algorithmic in nature as will be explored later on in this portfolio, this non-algorithmic element to human thought is, Roger Penrose claims in his book SHADOWS OF MIND, is due to quantum effects in the brain, which are the source of our feelings of self-awareness, our consciousness, and our capacity for leaps of inspiration. Since my representation had no plausible computational solution. I translated the algorithm into a field I am more familiar with: Architecture - A spatial representation of the algorithm in Architecture. I am incorporating algorithmic decisions in space used by the variables, which in this case are humans.
Since computers can only do what they are programmed to do and programs are algorithmic in nature as explored the singularity device. This non-algorithmic element to human thought is, Roger Penrose claims in his book SHADOWS OF MIND, is due to quantum effects in the brain, which are the source of our feelings of self-awareness, our consciousness, and our capacity for leaps of inspiration. Since my representation had no plausible computational solution. I translated the algorithm into a field I am more familiar with: Architecture - A spatial representation of the algorithm in Architecture. I am incorporating algorithmic decisions in space used by the variables, which in this case are humans.
Even though each particle has a lot of information about the other, they do not send messages back and forth. There are no messages between the particles saying, "I'm going down, therefore, you must go up" and waiting for the particle to receive the message. Yet, the particles are always connected and can behave as one. Quantum Entanglement is one of the concepts that led Albert Einstein to dislike the theory of Quantum Mechanics. Along with his co-workers, Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen, Einstein used entanglement to try to show weaknesses in quantum mechanics. Einstein called entanglement.
HUMANS AS VARIABLES
Human variability, or human variation, is the range of possible values for any measurable characteristic, physical or mental, of human beings. Differences can be trivial or important, transient or permanent, voluntary or involuntary, congenital or acquired, genetic or environmental. Each person being different is so essential a part of human experience that it is difficult to even imagine a human existence in which other people are identical. Furthermore, The social value put on these differences by the society in which one lives affects every aspect of a person's life.
COMMON HUMAN VARIBALES
SEX
Sexual orientation is an enduring personal quality that inclines people to feel romantic or sexual attraction (or a combination of these) to persons of the opposite sex or gender, the same sex or gender, or to both sexes or more than one gender.
Anthropometry
This refers to the measurement of the human individual. An earlytool of physical anthropology, it has been used for identification, for the purposes of understanding human physical variation, in paleoanthropology and in various attempts to correlate physical with racial and psychological traits.
AGE
Age is the accumulation of changes in a person over time.[1] Ageing in humans refers to a multidimensional process of physical, psychological, and social change. Some dimensions of ageing grow and expand over time, while others decline.
GENETIC VARIATION
Human genetic variation is the genetic differences both within and among populations. There may be multiple variants of any given gene in the human population (genes), leading to polymorphism. Many genes are not polymorphic, meaning that only a single allele is present in the population: the gene is then said to be fixed.








