Abstract This article examines how quantum theory—and the emerging landscape of quantum technologies—has reshaped contemporary aesthetic, narrative, and moral imagination. Moving beyond the well-documented influence of relativity on early modernist art, it argues that quantum mechanics has generated a particularly influential cultural provocation: superposition, entanglement, and probabilistic ontology have challenged classical assumptions about identity, causality, and worldhood. The essay traces how these concepts migrated into artistic practice long before their full technological realization. The discussion begins with Fernando Pessoa’s (1888–1935) heteronymy, read as an early literary analogue of entanglement: a distributed authorship in which multiple selves coexist and condition one another without resolving into unity. It then turns to Raúl Ruiz’s Three Lives and Only One Death (1996), whose overlapping destinies exemplify superposition at the level of cinematic ontology. A further step is taken with the Daniels’ interactive short Possibilia (2014), where digital branching structures operationalize narrative choice as a form of wavefunction collapse. The article also considers the philosophical and moral resonance of Everything Everywhere All at Once (2022), interpreted through an Everettian framework, and turns to Werner Herzog’s Theatre of Thought (2022), which explores speculative links between quantum theory and consciousness. A subsequent section addresses the proliferation of “quantum woo,” examining how quantum terminology circulates within wellness cultures and tracing its unexpected historical ties to the countercultural physics of the 1970s and the emergence of the no-cloning theorem. In the conclusion, the essay offers an ekphrastic reading of Laure Prouvost’s We Felt a Star Dying (2025), an installation that reframes quantum uncertainty and fragility as perceptual experience. Across these cases, the article sketches the contours of what might be called a ‘quantum humanism’, in which science and the arts collaborate to render the quantum world culturally intelligible without trivialization or mystification.
Massimo Leone (Tue,) studied this question.