Killed the Cat

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CANO ...

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Jan 16, 2004
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Manchestoh
Curiosity Killed The Cat

Why :confused:

This is a phrase ive never understood , im guessing there is a million and one answers like

Discuss :D
 

T.C

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Sep 2, 2003
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Dysfunction Junction
Curiosity Killed The Cat

Why :confused:

This is a phrase ive never understood , im guessing there is a million and one answers like

Discuss :D


no. :p stop being nosey about our thoughts ;) :p :D *hear faint sounds of a moggy using up life number 9 and its all cano's fault*
:p :rofl:

i reckon it makes sense.... supposing a cat wanders into battersea dogs home for a mooch about... wont do its health any favours, ignorance wouldve been bliss :D
 

ilovepiano

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Jul 9, 2002
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Maybe it's to do with Schrödinger's cat?

You know the one about the cat in a sealed room that may or may not be dead, and you don't know till you look, lol
 

Mr Radish

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Mar 27, 2007
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Movin' on up.
Maybe it's to do with Schrödinger's cat?

You know the one about the cat in a sealed room that may or may not be dead, and you don't know till you look, lol

Nice answer. here is a bit more detail!


Schroedinger's Cat

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On June 7 of 1935, Erwin Schroedinger wrote to Albert Einstein to congratulate him on what is now known as the EPR paper, a famous problem in the interpretation of Quantum Mechanics. Soon thereafter, he published what was to become one of the most celebrated paradoxes in quantum theory:
Schroedinger's Cat


A cat is placed in a box, together with a radioactive atom. If the atom decays, and the geiger-counter detects an alpha particle, the hammer hits a flask of prussic acid (HCN), killing the cat. The paradox lies in the clever coupling of quantum and classical domains. Before the observer opens the box, the cat's fate is tied to the wave function of the atom, which is itself in a superposition of decayed and undecayed states. Thus, said Schroedinger, the cat must itself be in a superposition of dead and alive states before the observer opens the box, ``observes'' the cat, and ``collapses'' it's wave function.