The Experiment That Broke Reality
David Albert
In this engaging lecture, David Albert guides viewers through some of the most surprising discoveries in modern physics by telling stories about what happens when you measure the properties of electrons. Starting with simple experiments involving "color" and "hardness," stand-ins for components of quantum spin, Albert builds toward increasingly baffling results. Electrons seem to defy every classical expectation: their measured properties resist prediction, filtering has no effect on seemingly random outcomes, and ingenious experimental setups reveal that electrons cannot be said to have taken any definite path at all. Through thought experiments involving magnetic boxes, the Aharonov-Bohm effect, and "total of nothing" boxes, Albert shows how quantum mechanics challenges our deepest assumptions about physical reality. The lecture is designed for a broad audience, requiring no technical background, yet it confronts head-on the profound limits of scientific explanation that quantum phenomena impose.