No.12412666 ViewReplyOriginalReport
hey /sci/, I broke out my crack pipe AND my LSD, and behold; I have comprehended copenhagen's interpretation of quantum probability with one simple consideration: an additional 4th dimension "p", we shall call "position". this gives us the spatial dimensions of length, width, height, and position. to understand, consider measuring the specific height of a slice of a 2d line wave, as in my pic; such a position cannot be measured as a singular height, but as a range of potential heights, essentially a superposition of heights. in this way, what we perceive as particles are actually 3d slices of 4d positional waves. the position of, say, an electron, cannot at any given time be measured, as it is potentially occupying ALL 3d space within its amplitude. this interpretation requires our experience of time to be an illusory concept, but it doesn't negate time as a concept; something has to allow for the positional wave, and if it's dimensions all the way up then so be it.