silver scribbler said:
ddq5 said:
No matter what his reflexes, he's not getting out of the box. Insult.
Doesn't necessarily mean the OP is referring to Shrodinger's cat once inside the box. The cat could have had amazing reflexes outside (and inside, in fact) the box, and this would have nothing to do with getting put into the box.
That explanation was pretty unclear, so allow me to use an analogy. If you tell someone that they have the dashing good looks of (*picks a random dead celebrity*) the late Heath Ledger, that doesn't necessarily mean you are saying that said person is deceased...
I politely disagree with that interpretation, though your reasoning is sound.
Firstly, Schrodinger's cat is not one specific cat, it refers to any cat that is in that particular box. Therefore, if the cat is no longer in the box, it is not a Schrodinger's cat. The main point in the original question is not whether the cat is in the box or not, but whether the cat is dead or alive.
Schrodinger's cat experiment demonstrates the principle of superposition: the ability of something to be in two distinctly different states at once (in this case, a cat is both dead and alive at the same time). The superposition is disrupted when you measure that thing (open the box and look at the cat) and the object in question is essentially forced to choose between one of the possible states (the cat is now either dead or alive, but not both).
In quantum mechanics, this is done through the use of wave functions, which presents a probability of an object being in the possible states. Before a measurement, the function is distributed so that the object can be in any of the possible states. But when measured, the function "collapses" so that it shows 100% probability of being in the state that you just measured. If you then leave the object alone for a time, the wave function will then widen out to eventually cover all the possibilities again (how long you have to leave it depends on the object).
To compliment someone for having the reflex of Schrodinger's cat is the equivalent of saying that person has the reflexes of a cat that is both dead and alive at the same time, since Schrodinger's cat is in a superposition (of being dead and alive at the same time). The cat's reflexes are not restricted by the box, but a dead cat's reflexes are roughly equivalent of that of a large boulder. Therefore you have someone who at the same time, has amazing reflexes and is about as agile as a brick wall.
My apologies if my explanations are inadequate or have confused you further.