So, you're done trying to fool everyone and along with it, spitting your venomous insults. Fine. I was not falling for it, anyway.
The arguments stand and no amount of "look at that experiment" calls will make your quantum fantasies become more real. Your record of false claims, exaggerations and contradictions in this thread alone is staggering. Teleportation? Sure, in your dreams. Turns out it is not real physical movement, but the state of entangled particles. That's the typical problem of sci-fi enthusiasts carried away by the yellow press coverage of scientific topics. Teleportation the case in hand: let's look at how the news is covered with fantastic claims to catch credulous readers:
www.forbes.com/sites/startswithabang/20 ... -next/amp/
At first glance, and looking at the Star Trek mention and pictures that start the article, it really looks like they teleported something. Until you get to this part deep down in the article:
That’s where quantum teleportation comes in. Quantum teleportation is a real phenomenon, but doesn’t actually transport or teleport any particles themselves. Rather, what gets transferred from one place to the other is the information inherent to an indeterminate quantum state, which is exactly what you’d need to arrive at your destination! The way this works is through pairs of entangled particles.
Yes, teleportation is just good old entanglement. Nonetheless, a marvelous feat. The problem comes when the newagers will try to sell you their quantum wooness.
The notions of the physical nature of the universe abandoned? Sure, in your wildest dreams of quantum ecstasy. Yet, Nature magazine seems not to have been informed of the new paradigm:
Quantum mechanics is the study of the dynamics of particles at its most fundamental level. The state of a particle, such as its position or momentum, is described by a statistical distribution given by its wavefunction. As this name suggests, this formalism gives matter many properties that are classically associated with waves.
Quantum physics is the study of matter and energy at its most fundamental level. A central tenet of quantum physics is that energy comes in indivisible packets called quanta. Quanta behave very differently to macroscopic matter: particles can behave like waves, and waves behave as though they are particles.
Yes: matter, matter, matter. And sure, making the distinction between macroscopic level and quantum level is for the mentally retarded.
Causality erased from our understanding of the universe? Sure, in your yoga trips, maybe. Meanwhile you still keep making spurious correlations as evidence of causal relations. Make up your mind!