{"ai_pass_count":5,"analysis_step_count":18,"confidence":0.5526140424258569,"created_at":"2026-07-05T02:07:56.337433+00:00","id":142698,"node_number":"683211","processing_time":2.920025587081909,"recent_steps":["net.store_session","net.llm_structured_analysis","net.rules_detect","net.context_window","net.store_session"],"recording_id":144356,"text":"And this is in direct keeping with some of the weirdness of quantum mechanics, quantum civics. When you start observing a system, when you start observing a quantum system, and that means you're now getting ready to take a measurement that actually alters the outcome of the experiment. Double-slit experiment is a very good example of that. You think that coherent beam of light is a beam of light that's not flaring out. It's very concentrated, and you pass it to a very close list of light. And depending on how you're measuring it, you can look at a back and you'll see what looks to be either a bunch of lines that are showing the interference of patterns happening back there. Or if you try measuring it for the measuring device behind the screen as you're measuring the photons or electrons that are coming through the slip, then you end up getting a pattern that looks like a shotgun pattern of individual parts, and it's almost like the electrons or photons are being measured. And they're acting weird at that point, so it shows that an observer is actually changing the outcome of an experiment on a month long."}