batmanandjoker said:
Because, for a composite object like the human body, to be in a superposition means that the whole collection of particles must be in one of two quantum states |0\rangle and |1\rangle, and this only works if each configuration is equally likely, and this only works if the two states are equal in energy.
The average human body contains roughly 7×10
27 atoms, i.e. 7 octillion atoms, i.e. 7 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 atoms.
How do you make sure that every one of these 7 octillion atoms is equal in energy, huh? Not an easy task, right?
The only feasible way to do this it to cool the composite object to its ground state (
i.e. its lowest energy state). This is the only way to control 7×10
27 atoms.
What temperature would that be?
Well, I don't have the correct answer, but a wild guess would be somewhere between 0.025 K and 0 K.
What is K? And why 0.025 K?
K stand for Kelvin and is a temperature scale, using absolute zero as its null point = -273.15 °C. The 0.025 K comes from a QM experiment where an acoustic resonator, consisting of about 10 trillion (10
12) atoms, was cooled to its ground state. As you see, the human body has many orders of magnitude more atoms then the tiny resonator (60 µm), hence we will get much closer to 0 K than the other way (
i.e. extremely hard to do in practice).
Therefore I can absolutely guarantee you that you will have a
very distinct "feeling" in your body

, loooong before even getting close to anything like a superposition. Trust me!
P.S: Superposition in the acoustic resonator lasted just a few nanoseconds (10-9) before being broken down, so any human going through this frozen hell got to be ready for the action! 