This is the kind of stuff that seriously messes with your head, more so than any psychiatrist ever could. To begin to understand it, you have to throw all logical thinking out the window.
Some of the best examples of such a situation is that when you jump out of a window, if you were so inclined, until the point that you begin the motion out of the window, there is a chance that you could go up. There is a chance that gravity could fail entirely, and you would leave the Earth. Until you jump, you will go both up and down.
Another example is a famous (theoretical) experiment. Take on cat, one sealed box, one radioactive emitting material and cyanide. Place these things in the box. Until you open the box, there is a chance Mittens is still alive. Until the box is opened, the cat is both alive and dead.
Basically, quantum physics gives birth to paradoxes.
And as an interesting little thing that can help you win endless bets in a pub, did you know that it's almost impossible to actually touch something, by technical definition? The repelling force between the particles of your hand and the object you wish to 'touch' is so strong at a short enough distance (we're talking negligible distance), that they will never actually touch, but will repel. Not so much that you can feel it, or see the effect. But it still happens. The only true way to touch something is to fuse with it, which brings about a nuclear reaction and then you quite literally have the power of the sun in your hand.
That's just the rule for solids touching solids, however. I don't know how it works with liquids and gases.
Some of the best examples of such a situation is that when you jump out of a window, if you were so inclined, until the point that you begin the motion out of the window, there is a chance that you could go up. There is a chance that gravity could fail entirely, and you would leave the Earth. Until you jump, you will go both up and down.
Another example is a famous (theoretical) experiment. Take on cat, one sealed box, one radioactive emitting material and cyanide. Place these things in the box. Until you open the box, there is a chance Mittens is still alive. Until the box is opened, the cat is both alive and dead.
Basically, quantum physics gives birth to paradoxes.
And as an interesting little thing that can help you win endless bets in a pub, did you know that it's almost impossible to actually touch something, by technical definition? The repelling force between the particles of your hand and the object you wish to 'touch' is so strong at a short enough distance (we're talking negligible distance), that they will never actually touch, but will repel. Not so much that you can feel it, or see the effect. But it still happens. The only true way to touch something is to fuse with it, which brings about a nuclear reaction and then you quite literally have the power of the sun in your hand.
That's just the rule for solids touching solids, however. I don't know how it works with liquids and gases.