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Originally Posted by Graybeard or is it simply that their two probablities waves are both stretched across the entire universe and when one collapses with 100% certainity, the other one must also collapse at the same instant.
But even then, wouldn't this be considered to break the maximum speed limit.
The only answer that suits everything is that they are not separated at all. But they appear to be separate to us ???? |
But if we're going to break the theory of locality and assume that they are not seperated but only appear to be to us, something we've never encountered before in our normal universe, then why can't we break the maximum speed limit rule while we're at it? I mean why be willing to accept one and not the other, since the laws of physics and our own observations seem to rule out both. Unless the math behind it proves that one is more likely than the other...