I don't have a physics degree. I have curiosity and a browser history that would concern most people.
I'm a regular person — husband, father, working professional — who got hooked on quantum mechanics the way some people get hooked on true crime or chess. I watch the lectures. I read the Reddit threads at midnight. I rewind the YouTube videos three times trying to understand why observation changes outcomes. Most of the time I end up more confused than when I started.
And I've come to believe that's exactly the right feeling.
Quantum Field of Dreams exists because I couldn't find the experience I wanted — something interactive, immersive, and honest that didn't require a graduate degree to appreciate, or treat you like a child if you didn't have one.
So I built it.
The simulations are real physics. The interpretations are genuinely contested. The philosophical implications are unsettled — even among experts. Nobody fully understands this stuff. That's not a bug. That's the most interesting thing about it.
Physicists have argued about what quantum mechanics means for 100 years. Copenhagen vs Many Worlds is still an open debate. You're not missing something — they are too.
Every lab runs real physics. The Bell inequality test uses actual CHSH calculations. The Schrödinger solver runs a real numerical integration. Not animations — experiments.
You don't need calculus to be floored by the double-slit experiment. You don't need a degree to find the block universe genuinely disturbing. Curiosity is the only prerequisite.
The most interesting conversations happen when people who think differently about reality end up in the same room. That's what the community board is for.
I consume everything I can get my hands on — lectures, papers, podcasts, Reddit threads, documentaries, philosophy blogs. I don't claim to understand all of it. Half the time a new concept just opens three more questions I didn't have before.
That feeling — of a question expanding faster than the answer — is what this site is built around. The head-hurting is the point. It means you've touched something real.
If you're here because reality feels stranger than it should, and you can't stop pulling at the thread — you're in exactly the right place.
Builder · Leander, Texas · Fascinated by everything at the edges of what's real
Not a physicist. Just someone who can't stop asking why.