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Six Impossible Things: The Mystery of the Quantum World (The MIT Press)
A concise and engaging investigation of six interpretations of quantum physics. Rules of the quantum world seem to say that a cat can be both alive and dead at the same time and a particle can be in two places at once. And that particle is also a wave everything in the quantum world can described in terms of wavesor entirely in terms of particles. These interpretations were all established by the end of the 1920s, by Erwin Schrdinger, Werner Heisenberg, Paul Dirac, and others. But no one has yet come up with a common sense explanation of what is going on. In this concise and engaging book, astrophysicist John Gribbin offers an overview of six of the leading interpretations of quantum mechanics. Gribbin calls his account "agnostic," explaining that none of these interpretations is any betteror any worsethan any of the others. Gribbin presents the Copenhagen Interpretation, promoted by Niels Bohr and named by Heisenberg the Pilot-Wave Interpretation, developed by Louis de Broglie the Many Worlds Interpretation (termed "excess baggage" by Gribbin) the Decoherence Interpretation ("incoherent") the Ensemble "Non-Interpretation" and the Timeless Transactional Interpretation (which theorized waves going both forward and backward in time). All of these interpretations are crazy, Gribbin warns, and some are more crazy than othersbut in the quantum world, being more crazy does not necessarily mean more wrong. Enjoy No any convert or low quality!