jmoorhea
- 7
- 0
Just wondering about Schroedingers Cat experiment.
While in box, Cat is both alive and dead until you open box and measure it according to the Copenhagen interpretation. Thats fine.
But if you replace the cat with a human, then the human also is dead and alive until you open the box and measure what state it is in.
I'm just confused though. If you ask the human after the experiment, did you notice anything strange while you were in the box, then they will say no and describe how they were alive all along.
Yet from the perspective of the person outside of the box, the Copenhagen interpretation states that human in box is both alive and dead?
So is there not a difference between the two perspectives?
While in box, Cat is both alive and dead until you open box and measure it according to the Copenhagen interpretation. Thats fine.
But if you replace the cat with a human, then the human also is dead and alive until you open the box and measure what state it is in.
I'm just confused though. If you ask the human after the experiment, did you notice anything strange while you were in the box, then they will say no and describe how they were alive all along.
Yet from the perspective of the person outside of the box, the Copenhagen interpretation states that human in box is both alive and dead?
So is there not a difference between the two perspectives?