Quantum Sheep

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A quantum sheep is simply a regular sheep that, under observation and with a poetic word written upon its back, can create random poems based on its movements and rest states. Multiple such sheep (15 in the original scenario), or a flock, are needed in order to contain enough words to form a poem and to introduce sufficient randomness. The concept of uncertainty involved in this process is said to be related to the basic nature of quantum mechanics[1]. The poetry itself is originally done in a style similar to the Japanese haiku in order to form the base words. Observers choose their own words from the resulting flock, without any particular form, to create new poems. Although the observers' results are somewhat light-hearted in nature it is considered a legitimate form of art. An example of the source may yield a general idea of what to expect from this method[2]:


CLOUDS GRAZE THE SKY;
BELOW, SHEEP DRIFT GENTLE
OVER FIELDS, SOFT MIRRORS,
WARM WHITE SNOW.


The first project with quantum sheep transpired in 2002 under the direction of Valerie Laws, using the sheep of one Donald Slater from Northumberland. Her success in this endeavor eventually lead to a book related to the poetry extracted from such experiments[3]. Indeed, her methods were also copied by other would-be poets seeking to try something a little bit unique. This in turn created a new type of poetry known as quantum sheep poetry[4] that uses methods or concepts similar to Law's. One example from her book is listed below, taken from the publisher's site[5]:


"The Sound of No Music"

In life there is no music
To warn us of danger,
Or sudden love. No strings
Start sobbing, no shark-attack
Knife beats, no gothic
Heart-clutching crescendo

ell (sic) us, don’t go down those stairs!
The shocks
Of burglar in your bedroom, metal
Railing through your chest, bus
Driving through your car, all
Happen, like sudden joy,
To totally inappropriate soundtracks
Or none at all. Blackbirds practise
Their phrasing, soap operas bleat,
A toilet flushes, as our life changes
Or ends, as we think, more
Than our pre-cinema ancestors did,
How, how can this happen, and to me?


Laws considers the poetry a new type of scientific art, or sci-art. As the term quantum sheep may also be used in the explanation of photonic entanglement[6] and cloning noise, her perceived connection may have deeper properties. Her opinion is that the poetry does indeed have a solid connection to the science of quantum mechanics, as quoted[7] from an article:

Laws, who has degrees in English and theoretical physics, calls her project Quantum Sheep, arguing that it contains the principles of quantum mechanics -- notably the randomness, the influence of the observer on the observed, and the duality in the interchange of the sheep and clouds in the original poem.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ BBC News, 2002.
  2. ^ Laws, 2008
  3. ^ Laws, 2006
  4. ^ E2 via "Cadmium Lemon," 2003.
  5. ^ Peterloo Poets, 2006.
  6. ^ Linares, 2005, pgs. 4-15.
  7. ^ Asian Economic News, 2002.

[edit] References

  • Laws, Valerie. April 5, 2008. Haik Ewe. Retrieved April 25, 2008.