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[personal profile] rhu

I'm catching up on Daf Yomi from while I was in New York. On Pesachim 9b, the Talmud presents the following case:

There are two roads between points A and B. One passes over a grave, so anyone taking that road becomes an av tumah (ritually impure and capable of transmitting tumah to certain items); the other road does not. Two people travel from A to B, each taking one of the two roads, but they don't know which one took the tumah road and which one took the tahor (pure) road.

The Talmud's conclusion is that individually, each person is presumed to be tahor, since there is not greater than 50% chance that each one is tamei. But if the two of them should happen to take hold of the same object at the same time, or enter the same building at the same time, the item or building becomes tamei because there is a 100% chance that of the two of them, one is tamei.

And I can't help but think of the double-slit experiment, wavefunction superposition, and quantum entanglement.

As [livejournal.com profile] introverte responded when I read the Talmud passage to her, "But is the cat dead?"

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Date: 2006-01-30 06:27 pm (UTC)
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From: [identity profile] 530nm330hz.livejournal.com
Actually, I think that is the law. (That's why I brought in entanglement.) Both people are supposed to go to mikveh as soon as possible "just in case".

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Andrew M. Greene

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