Steven Cartledge

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According to Einstein, only such absolute quantities can be used as the ingredients of a valid physical law. Laws built to Einstein’s specifications are called “covariant.” Today we know for sure that if a physical theory does not have a covariant formulation it cannot represent the facts. By looking at where it’s not covariant—wherever it uses a relative concept rather than an absolute one—we can even predict exactly how it must fail.
Quantum Reality: Beyond the New Physics
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