As alluded to earlier, I am comfortable with the notion that the time dimension may be purely a function of human consciousness. I hadn't considered that the spatial dimensions might also be an "uncompressing" of a more fundamental context, but why not? It puts certain other experiences into a possible framework.
What degree of consciousness do our individual cells experience? What do they observe?
When we die, does the soul of each cell go to Heaven? Do bad cells go to Hell? Does a liver perceive time?
Or is consciousness seated merely in the brain?
Burn says: I think it [quantum mechanics] does apply on the macro scale.
I'm not sure this is the case. We aren't able to predict planetary motion, etc., from quantum mechanics. Fluid dynamics cannot be extrapolated down to the quantum, and quantum cannot be extrapolated up to mundane fluid dynamics, from a purely mathematical perspective. It jumps a gap.
Tomorrow things may be different.
Bose-Einstein Condensate is an interesting material. But as far as I can see, I'm not sure we can employ quantum mechanics as the explanation for the behavior of this "new phase of matter". BEC has some interesting properties, and indeed can be described by anaolgy as behaving like a macro-level quantum particle, but it may be overstating things to say BEC is quantum at macro level - kind of like saying the room I painted yellow has the sun's rays pouring out of it.
;-)
I'd rather wait to see how BEC's properties become more fleshed out. We've only had some real BEC for, what, about ten years?
My understanding of super-cooled fluids is that their principle attribute is their lack of friction, which allows them to climb their containers; I'm not sure this is what you mean when you say their atoms can "materialize" outside of their containers...that would be news to me. I'm only familer with their ability to "spill", or migrate, but not instaneously disappear from one location and reappear in another.
The quantum computer chip will be an interesting endeavor. It works at very small dimensions. What would it take to make a planetary body behave like a quantum particle?