Why do so many textbooks confuse the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle with the observer effect? The uncertainty principle in quantum mechanics is sometimes erroneously explained by claiming that the measurement of position necessarily disturbs a particle's momentum eg by using a high frequency photon to measure the position of an electron, we disturb its momentum and vice versa
it's not because we don't have precise enough technology, not because we don't know where the electron is, its becuase the electron ITSELF doesn't know where it is. as a result of wave-particle duality and the inherent non-determinism in quantum mechanics
how ironic that einstein explained the photoelectric effect, founding quantum theory, yet later exclaiming that "God does not play dice"
it's not because we don't have precise enough technology, not because we don't know where the electron is, its becuase the electron ITSELF doesn't know where it is. as a result of wave-particle duality and the inherent non-determinism in quantum mechanics
how ironic that einstein explained the photoelectric effect, founding quantum theory, yet later exclaiming that "God does not play dice"