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Quantum mechanics and weird snake oil salesmen

21 September 2010 · by  Fr. Ernesto Leave a Comment

I was very busy yesterday so have yet to be able to continue the comments that I made on shoes and cultures the day before yesterday. Instead, I will leave you with the beginning of an article that many of you might enjoy reading.

Alan Boyle writes: Can the weirdness of quantum mechanics make you well, or make you wealthy? Presentations ranging from “The Secret” to “What the Bleep Do We Know?” suggest that science allows you to capitalize on quantum possibilities, but theoretical physicist Lawrence Krauss says it’s just a load of bleep.

Krauss has dealt with factual and fictional weirdness for decades — as the author of “The Physics of Star Trek,” as the head of Arizona State University’s Origins Project, and as the author of a “Quantum Man,” a soon-to-be-published biography of pioneering physicist Richard Feynman.

“I begin the book with a quote from Feynman that says, ‘Reality takes precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled,'” he told me. “I think the point is that Feynman realized that people can be fooled, but nature can’t.”

Krauss worries that a lot of people can be fooled by appeals to the admittedly weird world of quantum physics — a world in which particles are said to take every possible path from point A to point B, in which the position and velocity of particles are necessarily cloaked in uncertainty, in which the mere act of observation changes the thing being observed.

In the last of a series of columns written for Scientific American, Krauss says “no area of physics stimulates more nonsense in the public arena than quantum mechanics.” His list of “worst abusers” includes inspirational author Deepak Chopra, the best-selling book “The Secret” and the whole field of Transcendental Meditation. So what constitutes quantum quackery? Krauss discussed his criteria ln our interview last week. Here’s an edited transcript:

Of course, you will not have to go to the article in order to read the transcript! Let’s just say that Christians always need good answers to the type of “new age” mysticism that keeps wanting to pop up in modern western cultures.

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