Quote:
Originally Posted by humanbydefault Is physics "local" or "non-local"...?
Those familiarized with "russian dolls" will find the analogy ... intriguing?
If we imagined that there is in fact a multitude of "local eather" in each scale across the structure of the universe and each one is "placed" inside a bigger one and so on... could anyone say that physics is "local" and at the same time contradict himself by saying the entire opposite: that physics is non-local [too]?
I'm sure both concepts are perfectly compatible [one-another] IF we conceived the universe in this way.
That's the way I see it and I've trying to picture in these images above.
HUMANBYDEFAULT |
I think all "things" are connected and interconnected,a quantum non-locality,and can
indeed "appear" to be either local,or universal,simultanesly.
regards michael.