Comments by "" (@TheDavidlloydjones) on "MIT OpenCourseWare" channel.

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  11. This guy is really first-rate, but I've got a slightly different question. What I want to know is, What does it cost us that we don't have an intellectual bridge over the very tiny but ver-ree deep chasm between the areas of industry where the quantum view is useful and the rest of real life where we live in billiard ball physics at voltages between about one and the latest in high-tension transmission lines?* As theories go, the Standard Model is pretty good. It gives us replicable numbers out to twenty significant digits or so, and it lets us mix the chemicals and what-not in ways that make an advanced industrial economy tick over nicely, thank you very much. So it has some problems? Like e.g. a total 100% inability to explain Bell's Inequality and a 99.44% likelihood of drifting off into mindless blither when anybody tries? So what? That's my question. Where is it costing us spondulix that we can't explain the two-slit-experiment? Where there's money on the line is where we'll find the intellectual band-aids to get us through the next generation of our view of physical reality. ________________ * There is a good fix for this supposed chasm, using the explanation that quantum reality is everywhere, it's everywhere, all the way up. I.I.Rabi famously calculated the likelihood of a normal masonry brick levitating a foot (a measure of length used in the United States, Liberia and Saudi Arabia) in the air in any given second. For an encore, he did the Heisenberg uncertainties relevant to trying to drive a ten-foot truck through a nine-foot gap. Both calculations come up with numbers like once in ten to the Q times the age of the universe, with Q being, uh, rather large numbers. The excellent Jim El-Khalili, who is well overdue to become Sir James, has some good lectures, e.g. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwgQVZju1ZM&ab_channel=TheRoyalInstitution, on a parallel theme, that we see quantum effects at human scales in biology. (Google him: I think he might be in the running to be the Carl Sagan of the present generation of public science.) Neither of these life-rafts of sanity, however, comes with an answer to the intellectual challenge of Bell and those pesky interference patterns.
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