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  1. David Elieser Deutsch FRS [4] (/ d ɔɪ tʃ / DOYTCH; born 18 May 1953) [3] is a British physicist at the University of Oxford. He is a visiting professor in the Department of Atomic and Laser Physics at the Centre for Quantum Computation (CQC) in the Clarendon Laboratory of the University of Oxford.

  2. David Deutsch, né le 18 mai 1953, est un physicien israélo-britannique, professeur de physique à l'université d'Oxford. Il se spécialise dans le domaine de l'informatique quantique. Il est notamment connu pour l'algorithme de Deutsch-Jozsa.

  3. www.daviddeutsch.org.ukDavid Deutsch

    David Deutsch. I am a Visiting Professor of physics at the Centre for Quantum Computation, the Clarendon Laboratory, Oxford University and an Honorary Fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford. I work on fundamental issues in physics, particularly the quantum theory of computation and information, and constructor theory.

  4. Prenez RDV en ligne avec Dr David Deutsch: Gastro-entérologue et hépatologue, Conventionné secteur 2. Adresse : 29 Boulevard de Beauséjour, 75016 Paris.

  5. Consultez le profil de David Deutsch sur LinkedIn, une communauté professionnelle d’un milliard de membres. Gastroenterologist and Digestive Oncologist, MD, MSc · Expérience : Institut Curie ·...

    • 594 abonnés
  6. Since 1999 I have been a non-stipendiary Visiting Professor of Physics at the University of Oxford, where I am a founder member of the Centre for Quantum Computation at the Clarendon Laboratory. I am an Honorary Fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford and a Fellow of the Royal Society and of the Institute of Physics.

  7. David Deutschs TED talks. A pioneer in quantum computation and quantum information theory, David Deutsch now seeks to define the boundaries between the possible and the impossible.

  8. 22 sept. 2022 · Professor David Deutsch, Visiting Professor at the Department of Physics at Oxford, has today been named as one of four international pioneering physicists to receive the 2023 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics for leading foundational work in quantum information.

  9. Theoretical physicist David Deutsch delivers a mind-bending meditation on the "great monotony" -- the idea that nothing novel has appeared in the universe for billions of years -- and shows how humanity's capacity to create explanatory knowledge could be the thing that bucks this trend.

  10. Deutschs Law’: My answer to the Edge question 2004, “What Is Your Law?” is here. (January, 2004). Physics, Philosophy and Quantum Technology (2002) Early groping toward constructor theory. First impressions of Stephen Wolfram’s book A New Kind of Science in The Daily Telegraph (May, 2002).