Mr Spinkles
Mr
To the extent that argument is plausible, the following argument is equally plausible: Can you really wonder if you believe that anything is possible, and then mystics grab onto that idea to believe that this potentiality could be harnessed by the mind? One idea is not that far-fetched from the other.Can you really wonder if you believe that spooky action at a distance exists, and then mystics grab onto that idea to believe that such force could be harnessed by the mind? One idea is not that farfetched from the other.
To the layperson one idea seems to lead naturally to the other. Uncertainty in QM seems to lead to the idea that everything is completely uncertain and everything is equally probable. Nonlocality in QM seems to lead to the idea that everything is completely connected and perfectly nonlocal. Explaining to the layperson why those are indeed far-fetched ideas even in the context of QM is the modest purpose of this thread.
Assuming for the sake of argument that it is technically true that nonlocal effects occur in QM, it is also true that they are extremely fragile, weak, statistical effects on the quantum scale. You can throw two baseballs around in a stadium for an eternity and they simple are not going to become "entangled" in any significant way. We will never find that if we measure the spin of one baseball, it has a nonlocal effect on another distant baseball. In other words, nonlocality (if it exists) is not a significant effect at the level of the everyday macroscopic world, any more than the Heisenberg uncertainty principle. Surely you agree with this.