〰ミ᯾
Explanations for The Double-Slit Experiment (DSE) can be found where most
explanations are commonly located. Although most would prefer a
science communicator to distill the results of these experiments down in a
simple TicTok, any level of brevity or synopsis removes most-of (all) the
crucial-for-understanding details (e.g. quantum probability, electrons,
protons, mass, gravity, particles, waveform interference patterns, and
information measurement).
Spend any amount of time studying the DSE's results and their outcomes (of
novice and quantum-physicist alike) results in either confusion and/or disbelief.
Because, of course, how else could the phrase, 'The particle—once measured—goes back in time to its point of origin and subsequently appears as if it was always
a wave and never a particle' be thought of? If you aren't confused, what you don't understand is
that it's not just an experiment which appears to reveal particles of
light-energy travelling backwards in time, but that those particles are
doing-so at faster than the speed of light. Two impossibilities in physics at the same time is, normally, reason to conclude an huge error in the experiment.
ᯣ ᨟ ᦒ
The neuron cells of everything with a centralized collection of ganglia (or
a brain) collects "experiences" which were correlated with an emotion that
was "felt" by the body. Emotions are caused by a mixture of
gland-releasing chemicals in the organism's nervous system. The
stronger the emotion, the stronger the memory; strong memories are easily
and readily recalled and subsequently reinforced (and re-reinforced).
The brain's subconscious (mistakenly referred-to as its
right-half because the speech-center is located in most human's left
lobe) is capable of making connections, contemplating ideas, weighing
options, and making mental, non-verbal "suggestions" (at all times, not just
when the conscious-brain is resting). Most human's conscious-brain can
not "recognize" their sub-conscious "at work"; instead, we source those
ideas as coming from our intuition.
𐩘𑁍𐩕
Each spermatozoa and every ovum contain one strand (a half-strand of DNA)
comprised of a random portion of that individual's DNA.
Consequently, spermatozoa and ovum are each "coded" for a slightly different combination of
characteristics. Every fertilized egg divides exponentially as each
of the cells grows according to the combination of that random portion's
"coding".
Evolution (mistakenly referred-to as survival of the fittest) can be easily identified when an animal's society (or culture) incentivizes specific characteristics over others. If a specific eye-color or body-size or strength or wing-span is favored by enough of a species, for multiple generations, those selectively chosen-for traits or characteristics are said to have "evolved" to become dominant.
more or less:
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