Fred-Rick
1 min readAug 13, 2021

--

P.S. Quantum Mechanics.

I truly am a structural philosopher, so I look at the surface of things and make up my mind about them.

Once folks dive into QM, I am actually not all that versed in it.

However, many scientists use the information they have from QM and placate reality as if it is indeed like QM. That is not true.

The simple example is rolling a die. Roll it once and we have no idea what the outcome is going to be. Uncertainty is therefore certain with rolling a die once.

When we role the die one million times, we end up with receiving certainty. We can know for a fact (or something that is extremely close to a fact) that 3 will be rolled one-sixth of the time.

Repetition is therefore the death to uncertainty, and we know that from our own lives, too. The first times we do things we are uncertain. The more times we do them, the more secure we are in our actions and thinking.

And yes, at the quantum level, the single quantum may be the subject matter all love to study, but our reality is filled with many, many, many, many quanta. The uncertainty is always overcome.

Good luck working in the field : - )

--

--

Fred-Rick
Fred-Rick

No responses yet