Is there really an uncertain event? A professor in our school said that all uncertain events are inevitable events. I thought about it carefully and found some truth.
Let me tell you a paradox. All absolute theories in the world are wrong (so this sentence is also wrong)
So there is no need to consider these issues at all.
In quantum mechanics, there is a very obscure thing called uncertainty theory, which was put forward by Heisenberg and explained quantum together with Schrodinger equation. I won't talk about the details, I'll briefly talk about what he means.
When we are observers, if we determine the speed of the observed object, we cannot determine the position (coordinates) of the observed object.
or vice versa, Dallas to the auditorium
Heisenberg used a lot of messy matrices to deduce this theory. The emergence of this theory has a great influence on natural science (physics), for example, most students in physics department failed in the course. Just kidding.
Meanwhile, Schrodinger's cat, Schrodinger's cat theory is very good, just like what your teacher said. You can have a look if you are interested. Let me explain it to you briefly.
The event is covered by a probability cloud. If the observer observes the observed object, the wave function will collapse.
What do you mean? Look at this experiment.
That is, when you don't know the result, what you observe is likely to become a certain state, but once you observe it, you don't know the result.
For example, if you toss a coin, it will be covered by a probability cloud with 50% positive probability and 50% negative probability, but when you observe it, the wave function will collapse into a normal function, so that you can observe the result and know what will fall on your face in the end.
What your teacher said is in a dialectical way. There may be no absolute things in the world, such as complete error, complete sin, complete brightness, complete goodness and so on.
You think the speed of light is the fastest, but we haven't learned faster. You think the universe is the largest. Maybe there is a parallel universe outside the universe.
Wait, wait, wait.
Everything in the world is relatively complementary and complementary.
Lao Tzu said this sentence thousands of years ago, loud and clear, clever and clumsy, eloquent and round. . . .
This sentence is hanging, not just dialectical thinking, I think.
The extremes of things must be reversed, and the extremes of things must be reversed.
Now let's continue to talk about uncertainty and certainty. As for uncertainty, we have to use relativity. If God really exists, then for you, the coin you throw is uncertain, but it is a 50% probability. For God, it is certain.
Then I want to ask you, which side of a coin is certain?
Therefore, any theory is incomplete, and these theories need to find their own suitable soil.
You may think that the coin you throw is a combination of wind resistance, upward throwing force, gravity and so on, and finally you will get the result you see. In fact, it is still the uncertainty of Schrodinger's cat and Heisenberg.
Everything in the world is uncertain and certain, and everything is contradictory. Only thinking can drive us crazy.