Reminiscences: 1976 interview with J.A.Wheeler (friend of Bohr and Einstein)

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John Archibald Wheeler, a prominent 20th-century physicist, is remembered for his originality and vision, having been a mentor to Richard Feynman. The discussion highlights a 1976 interview with Wheeler, emphasizing his insights into the nature of physical reality as fundamentally linked to information. Many participants express interest in finding more resources that capture Wheeler's reflections on his career and notable figures in physics. A suggested article by Anton Zeilinger summarizes Wheeler's ideas, particularly his Bayesian approach to understanding quantum paradoxes. The conversation invites further contributions of relevant links and materials related to Wheeler's legacy.
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http://arxiv.org/abs/1105.4532

In case anyone is interested. John Archibald Wheeler was a a great 20th C physicist (he was Feynman's PhD advisor I think.) He had originality and vision. I'd like to have more links to online sources that have Wheeler remembering people and events of his long career. Please add any good Wheeler stuff if you have some.
 
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marcus said:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1105.4532

In case anyone is interested. John Archibald Wheeler was a a great 20th C physicist (he was Feynman's PhD advisor I think.) He had originality and vision. I'd like to have more links to online sources that have Wheeler remembering people and events of his long career. Please add any good Wheeler stuff if you have some.

I thought this link to a short article by Anton Zeilinger was an interesting summary of some of Wheeler's ideas. The crux seems to be that what we take to be physical reality is essentially information and that many of the apparent paradoxes of quantum physics have to do with states of information and the way those states are updated. This would suggest that Wheeler took a Bayesian approach in his thinking about these things.

http://www.metanexus.net/ultimate_reality/zeilinger.pdf
 
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