Difference between revisions of "Book/Speakable and Unspeakable in Quantum Mechanics"

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On page 27, Bell said:
On page 27, Bell said:
{{Blockquote
{{Blockquote
|text=It remains a logical possibility that it is the act of consciousness which is ultimately responsible for the reduction of the wave packet9.
|text=It remains a logical possibility that it is the act of consciousness which is ultimately responsible for the reduction of the wave packet.
|sign=John Bell in the chapter on '''The moral aspect of quantum mechanics'''
|sign=John Bell in the chapter on '''The moral aspect of quantum mechanics'''
}}
}}

Revision as of 15:04, 2 December 2022

Bell, John (1987). Speakable and Unspeakable in Quantum Mechanics (PDF) (First ed.). local page. ISBN 0-521-36869-3. 


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This is the book that collects John Bell's paper, and it includes very seminal papers that explains the boundaries of physics, information, and ethics. This is a must read for Data Science. This book has a sequel[1] by Reinhold Bertlmann and Anton Zeilinger as editors.

Important content

On page 27, Bell said:

It remains a logical possibility that it is the act of consciousness which is ultimately responsible for the reduction of the wave packet.

— John Bell in the chapter on The moral aspect of quantum mechanics

For a short review on Bell's inequality, please watch this video:Bell's Inequality: The weirdest theorem in the world[2]. On page

References

  1. Reinhold Bertlmann; Anton Zeilinger, eds. (2017). QUANTUM UNSPEAKABLES II Half a Century of Bell’s Theorem. local page. ISBN 978-3-319-38987-5. 
  2. IBM, ed. (Oct 8, 2022). Bell's Inequality: The weirdest theorem in the world. local page: Qiskit. Retrieved 2 December 2022. 

Related Pages

John Bell