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Quantum mechanics shows 'common sense' the door

 Quantum physics is strange. At least, it is strange to us, because the rules of the quantum world, which govern the way the world works at the level of atoms and subatomic particles (the behavior of light and matter, as the renowned physicist Richard Feynman put it), are not the rules that we are familiar with — the rules of what we call “common sense.”

The quantum rules, which were mostly established by the end of the 1920s, seem to be telling us that a cat can be both alive and dead at the same time, while a particle can be in two places at once. But to the great distress of many physicists, let alone ordinary mortals, nobody (then or since) has been able to come up with a common-sense explanation of what is going on. More thoughtful physicists have sought solace in other ways, to be sure, namely coming up with a variety of more or less desperate remedies to “explain” what is going on in the quantum worlphenomenona that are to be observed in such a process of measurement.* In contrast, previous theories (e.g., Newtonian mechanics or classical statistical mechanics) started with assumptions about what each individual system is and discussed both measurement and statistics as having a secondary kind of significance that is ultimately based on assumptions as to what is, with regard to individual systems

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