Imagine the Shrödinger's cat theory. Let's say it becomes perfectly actualized by a team of scientists, and the box is alienated to a remote location no one person on earth knows to exist. Let's say the one person, we'll call him John, on earth who discovered the location, didn't reveal it, and then agreed to bring it to the location dies moments before his return home. There is no surrounding context or information to even hint to his colleagues where it might have been taken. It is truly lost. Now let's say not long after John's death, yet before enough time has passed for the cat to die of natural causes, an alien spaceship full of ETs unknown to any earthican just so happens to land at the location the box was lost at. One of the ETs sees the box, peeks inside and sees.... whatever outcome they see. Rapidly realizing they landed at the wrong galactic coordinates, the ETs leave just as soon as they arrived. Miraculously, the team that sent John off with the box randomly rediscovers it within enough time for the cat to still theoretically be naturally alive. The team approaches the box and as one of them opens the lid they see... whatever outcome they see.
The question here is: would they see the same thing the aliens saw?
>pic unrelated
The question here is: would they see the same thing the aliens saw?
>pic unrelated