I bought this book just when it came out (1997) by that time I was finishing high school and I had lots of interest in the mysterious quantum mechanics so I hoped that this title would enlightening me a little bit more. The result: I had a couple of weeks full of entertaining and amazed discussions as how nature works. One of the things that I still remember to this date is the wonderful first section called "The mystery of...
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I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book. I have read other books about quantum physics and found this one to be most down-to-earth and easy to relate to. Physics majors and scientists, relax. This book is not directed towards you. It is directed towards laymen without a strong foundation in science, and it succeeds very well in its goals. It is readable, refreshing and makes deep concepts almost tangible.
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I'm fascinated by non-locality and have read a few other books on the subject. Most give a brief description of the issue and move on to talk about the implications. This book takes what is inherintly something impossible to conceptualize and walks you through the subject. This book does a great job explaining what happens but not why it happens. Apparently, noone knows. Read this book. Then, read it again. Non-locality...
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This account of quantum mechanics deals with the enigmas and ambiguities of the standard Copenhagen account, including the mysteries of the EPR, and Bell's theorem. It is useful for including material on the question of decoherence and its clarification of the contradictions of the Schrodinger's cat paradoxes. The book deals also with the more extravagant views about the place of consciousness in the process of measurement...
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This work puts common sense back into quantum mechanics. The new age philosophers with their mumbo jumbo of parallel universes and live/dead cats will not like the clear and common sense explanation of how the definition of the meaning of measurement takes the weirdness out of quantum mechanics. The fact is that quantum mechanics does work and does explain the real word better than any other theory. I have tried to understand...
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