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06-24-2002, 06:26 AM | #11 |
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I think this particular breakthrough is huge and the little coverage it has received, reassures me of the stupidity of the masses.
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06-24-2002, 06:33 AM | #12 |
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Learnt my quantum from books and magazines mostly, so I am afraid that I am not too hot on web sources. It is, as always, worth looking at the new scientist and scientific american archives. NS in particular produced a great free booklet outlining QM for laypeople... perhaps there is a PDF copy around?
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06-24-2002, 07:06 AM | #13 | |
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The <a href="http://www.newscientist.com/hottopics/quantum/quantum.jsp" target="_blank">New Scientist Website</a> has many articles about the quantum world including ones about teleportation. |
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06-29-2002, 02:08 PM | #14 |
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Oh great! Now this stuff. I am still trying to figure out if the F@#$in' cat is alive or dead.
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06-29-2002, 02:57 PM | #15 |
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Until it is measured, the cat exists in a part-dead, part alive quantum state. Of course, we dont' know what that really means. But then if you look up the Copenhagen interpretation, we're not even sure if we need to know!
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06-29-2002, 03:07 PM | #16 |
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Suppose one modifies the experiment in the light of the animal rights movement. Instead of a cat, one gets in the box oneself and closes the lid. The apparatus is set up so that you have no way of knowing the device has functioned, and when the quantum decay takes place death will be instantaneous, so that when death comes it will not be preceded by prior knowledge.
Now suppose the decay has a half life of 20 minutes. I suggest that if you sit in the box for one day and emerge unscathed you would have good grounds for accepting the 'many worlds' interpretation. I'm not exactly sure how it works in the Copenhagen interpretation, since only one outcome is observable Anyone believe in 'many worlds' that much? Or want to find out that much? [ June 29, 2002: Message edited by: beausoleil ]</p> |
06-29-2002, 05:19 PM | #17 |
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That's like I was tellin' my friend Randy the other day. I said, "Randy, if you keep dippin' that Copenhagen it's gonna kill ya."
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06-29-2002, 06:02 PM | #18 | |
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Well, frankly speaking, I don't believe in the 'absolute power' of the observer to determine a probabilistic event as described in the copenhagen interpretation. Furthermore, the 'memory storage system' as described in the many world interpretion is also far from being a reasonable interpretion to me. Anyway, I can't any reason and usage for the creating all those interpretions, why can't we just accept the randomness motion of the quantum world instead of making them deterministic. |
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06-30-2002, 04:25 AM | #19 | |
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What cat in the box? I am talking about that little F@#$er on by back porch. It never moves. It just sits there. |
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06-30-2002, 07:13 PM | #20 | |
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