On Dec 17, 10:28 pm, Sam Carana <[email protected]> wrote:
> So, what's the story in case of entanglement?
>
> Cheers!
> Sam Carana

I don't know enough about how the experiments are actually conducted
to really give any better than a guess. It's difficult to find
accounts of the actual materials and observations online, since the
existence of photons and other particles is so unquestioned, the
experiments are described in terms which take that for granted. My
guess though is that entanglement may be an example of observing our
own equipment at such a microcosmic level, that what we are detecting
has not developed any sense of space. We are basically pinging the
singularity. It's hard to speculate on what sensorimotive experience
is like on these levels - it may be the case that every particle,
every quantum event is actually a diffracted instance of the
singularity itself. There may only be one proton, it's just very very
busy from out perspective.

Craig

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