Van Gonzalez

17%
Flag icon
We can only make analogies with things we have direct experience of, such as waves and particles. The physicist Arthur Eddington pointed this out in memorable fashion back in 1929. In his book The Nature of the Physical World, he said: No familiar conceptions can be woven around the electron ... something unknown is doing we don’t know what. [This] does not sound a particularly illuminating theory.
Six Impossible Things: The Mystery of the Quantum World
Rate this book
Clear rating