--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, cardemaister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, off_world_beings 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
> wrote:
> > Can you repeat the question in more detail.
> > I have the answer.
> 
> What is it that's "uncertain" in Heisenberg's Uncertainty
> Principle? 
> 


Before you do the experiment, the position, direction, and spin of 
the particle cannot be known because it is only when the observer 
observes the atom that it has the characteristics you observe. 
In other words, it really was not a particle until it is concretized 
by an observation, and the observer had a part in it's 
state/creation. It was really just a potential in the field, and it 
had infinite possible trajecteries and spin, but it cannot be known 
ahead of time which it would take. It is uncertain.
Only after observation can one see which trajectory it took. It 
could take any. 
Even after it is observed, one cannot really say it is a concrete 
item. It is really a wave with no real boundaries within the quantum
ocean that it arises from. Therefore, the characteristics of the 
universe are dependent on the characteristics of the observer, (as 
Maharishi has stated).

OffWorld





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