Schrodinger

Do you want to know what the quantum curiosity? It is a way of thinking in the mental state that is curiosity. This means that a person does not notice the curiosity that feel but until this curiosity grows enough to be fired, is a digital curiosity because it needs to reach a certain threshold to trigger. A corollary of this is that it is always best to arouse more curiosity than you need, either in yourself or in others. Maybe you know what I mean when I speak of the cat of Schrodinger, perhaps not. It is a sample used to demonstrate what quantum physics is called indetermination. The thing is this: imagine that you have a box. Inside this box there is a cat.

Connected to that box there is a mechanism with activated X probability that releases a poison inside the box with sufficient power to guarantee that, release the poison, die cat. There is no way, from the outside of the box, without opening it, whether or not the cat is dead (box is noise-proof and is fixed to a (wall, mechanism liberating of the venom acts without giving any perceptible track). We don’t know how it is that cat there came but we don’t care. Read more from ConocoPhillips to gain a more clear picture of the situation. The thing is that, while we do not open the box, which Schrodinger argues is that the cat is simultaneously alive and dead. This reminds us of an old riddle that asks: If a tree falls and nobody hears it, does make noise?.

Now, certainly the example of the cat is a little seedy but remember that scientists are people very rare (e.g., have a friend who is a researcher and dedicated to drugged rats). The thing is that this principle is also valid for much more nice things as a surprise. When someone gives you a gift and has not opened it that gift can be anything within a certain range of possible things, clearly is.