All publications about the “discoveries” of theorists from quantum mechanics revolve only around mystical ideas.
For example, publications: Quantum paradoxes lead to the idea of the existence of God, Quantum physics and belief in God, God is everywhere. An American physicist put forward the theory that the Universe has consciousness, God lives in a quantum world, Quantum physics has proved the existence of life “after death” …
There are no non-mystical publications on topics of quantum mechanics. And this clearly and clearly characterizes this false science and the people involved in it. All these people, starting with its founders, are mystics. And calling them scientists, one must understand that they studied theology.
The Wiki has an article on Quantum Mysticism: Quantum Mysticism links consciousness, the human mind, and philosophical systems to the ideas of quantum mechanics.
This term comes from the founders of quantum mechanics. The term is used in the work of Erwin Schrödinger and Eugene Wigner. Schrödinger described his mystical views based on Hindu philosophy.
Wolfgang Pauli was an active preacher of quantum mysticism.
Juan Miguel Marin, a historian at Harvard writes: “Many modern physicists would be shocked if they knew exactly what Weil and Pauli meant when they used the term field in their now considered classics. The inner world of each of them was permeated with mysticism, they were looking for ways to unite consciousness and physics. Weil published the text of the lecture, which he concluded by praising the Christian-mathematical mysticism of Nicholas of Kuzansky “
Theorist Roger Penrose, in his book Shadows of the Mind, expressed the idea that consciousness can be a quantum phenomenon. In his model of “guided objective reduction”, together with Stuart Hameroff, he proposed that quantum effects affect neural activity through microtubules entering the cytoskeleton of cells.
David Bohm was greatly influenced by the prophet Jiddu Krishnamurti. In his 1980 book Wholeness and the Implicate Order, Bohm noted that Krishnamurti was the source of the worldview expressed in his interpretation of quantum mechanics. In this book, Bohm presents reality as a kind of integrity that can be understood using terms such as “implicit” or “hidden order,” on the one hand, and “manifested,” “manifested,” or “manifested order,” on the other.
Anton Zeilinger and his colleagues in their article “Experimental Test of Nonlocal Realism”, published in the journal Nature in 2007, wrote that quantum physics has not left stone unturned from ideas of realism.