Yahoo Web Search

  1. Browse new releases, best sellers or classics & find your next favourite book. Huge selection of books in all genres. Free UK delivery on eligible orders

    • Customer Reviews

      See What Our Customers Have To Say

      About Our Products.

    • Kindle eBooks

      Choose from thousands of eBooks

      available on Amazon Kindle.

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. What the Bleep Do We Know!? (stylized as What tнē #$*! D̄ө ωΣ (k)πow!? and What the #$*! Do We Know!?) is a 2004 American pseudo-scientific film that posits a spiritual connection between quantum physics and consciousness (as part of a belief system known as quantum mysticism).

  3. Apr 23, 2004 · Watch What the Bleep Do We Know (2004) online. Documentary postulating the existence of a spiritual connection between the realms of quantum physics and consciousness, demonstrating this through inspiring visual effects, story-telling and interviews with experts.

    • (409)
    • 108 min
  4. Apr 14, 2005 · Shifting from quantum theory to mystical mumbo jumbo in the blink of an eye, it blends hard science fact with Star Trek visuals, and talking head interviewees with a deadly dull drama about hearing...

  5. Synopsis Amanda, a divorced photographer, has a fantastic experience when life begins to unravel around her, revealing the cellular, molecular and quantum worlds that lie beneath everything ...

    • (77)
    • Documentary
    • Mark Vicente, Betsy Chasse, William Arntz
  6. Sep 10, 2004 · stars Marlee Matlin as Amanda, a grumpy, dispirited everywoman who gets a lesson in quantum mechanics from a basketball-playing child and ends up drawing little glitter hearts all over her...

    • Dave Kehr
  7. Ratings: 6.60 / 10 from 113 users. This hard-to-describe movie, which combines talking-head documentary footage with a fictional narrative, attempts to explain quantum physics in terms most audiences can understand.

  8. Sep 10, 2004 · A collection of talking-head physicists, philosophers, religious scholars, and mystics (all of whom are deliberately unidentified until the end credits to obscure their dubious authority) casually toss about terms like “epistemic” and “gifts of intentionality” in arguing that reality—rather than being an external force—is something ...

  1. People also search for