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EbookBell Team
4.3
78 reviews
It
works flawlessly and has never let me down—or anybody else for that
matter. But even as I used it and taught it, at some deep level I knew
that I didn’t really get it. I felt as if I were merely going through
the motions that the pioneers of the theory choreographed long ago. Like
all physicists I am fluent in Newtonian physics, also known as classical physics, and
when the occasion demands, I rattle off its decrees, chapter and verse,
the way an evangelist quotes the Bible, but I was never able to attain
that same feeling of familiarity with quantum mechanics.
There
is a strangeness about quantum mechanics that is rooted not in its
mathematical complexity but in the paradoxes and enigmas that have
bedeviled it from birth. One of the most famous of those conundrums is
the story of Schrödinger’s hapless cat, which according to quantum
mechanics is supposed to be both alive and dead at the same time. Other
mysteries include the claim that a quantum particle can seem to be in
two places at once, that particles can behave like waves and waves like
particles, and that information appears to be transmitted
instantaneously. Collectively, these puzzles have been called quantum weirdness. (…)