Question:

Do You Believe The Observation Of....?

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either a subject or an event changes it... in any way?

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  1. Apart from the whole quantum mechanics thing which is not my area of expertise, there are many observer effects in human behavior, sociology, animal behavior, etc. Behavior is changed when the observed person or animal knows they are being observed.

    For example, people answer questions differently when the questions are asked by a person or they are filling out a form.


  2. more or less  the accuracy ,quality ,framework and utility of the information obtained from an observation will change

    invariably,(unless of course ,the use of engineered instruments are involved in the observation)however even with

    the use of such devices,to reach a drawing conclusion of the observation-other filtering resources used for the subject or event will have an effect on the final conclusion,another big plus to this is,that only the 5 steps used to determine the

    validity of such observational conclusion, may enable a different understanding of  the evidence  to the frame and

    the individuals where the subject and/or event is targeted

  3. sorry dont have a clue

  4. You mean like Schrodingers cat?

    I dont believe, at least its not that simple. But I am no physiscist or anything.

    I dont know how deep to get into this, since you are only asking for what we believe.  

    I do believe in God, and God can change or guide things if he see fit.

  5. I admit I am not the brightest crayon in the box...

    BUT your question just totally confused me and the other six intelligent people looking over my shoulder!

  6. i think you lost about 65% of the rest of us with that ugly question. Feel free to share a secret with me, about yourself. Then maybe you will know why you just became my main subject.

  7. That's not quite what quantum mechanics says.  Quantum mechanics applies to very small particles, like electrons.  An electron has several states it could be in, and you don't know which one it's in until you measure it and find out.  Until then, it's in what's called a 'superposition' of states, kinda both in and not in a lot of possible states.  The act of measuring 'collapses the waveform' and forces it into a state.  However, you haven't chosen that state - you merely made it pick one.  The observation doesn't determine what the outcome will be, it merely forces there to be one.

  8. Quantum effects don't register on a macro scale so it depends on what sort of event you are referring to.

  9. Quantum mechanics laws indicate that observing an event can alter the event.

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