HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016027.jpg

1.37 MB
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Extraction Summary

1
People
4
Organizations
0
Locations
1
Events
0
Relationships
4
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Book page / scientific text (part of house oversight production)
File Size: 1.37 MB
Summary

A page from a book or paper (page 337) titled 'Free Will' discussing a 'Quantum Morse Machine' and a 'Simple Free Will Theorem.' It uses the history of WWII cryptography (Claude Shannon, German one-time pads) to argue about the non-computability of the Universe and quantum mechanics. The document bears a House Oversight stamp.

People (1)

Name Role Context
Claude Shannon Mathematician/Cryptographer
Cited for proving that a one-time pad is unbreakable during the Second World War.

Organizations (4)

Name Type Context
British forces/intelligence
Mentioned as having succeeded in breaking German codes.
German military
Mentioned regarding the fatal weakness in their one-time pads during WWII.
Allied code breakers
Those who worked out the random number sequences to decode messages.
House Oversight Committee
Implied by the footer stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT'.

Timeline (1 events)

Second World War
British forces breaking German one-time pad encryption due to pseudo-random generation.
Europe (implied)

Key Quotes (4)

"In the quantum Morse machine, I do transmit information faster than the speed of light."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016027.jpg
Quote #1
"Claude Shannon proved a one-time pad is unbreakable during the Second World War."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016027.jpg
Quote #2
"If sequences of random measurements taken in the universe are non-computable it follows the Universe as a whole must be non-computable."
Source
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Quote #3
"In principle, the Universe must be non-decryptable."
Source
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Quote #4

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