At the heart of the debate is the question as to whether reality as we know it exists when we’re not observing it. Bohr believed that the smallest matter consists only of probabilities and contradictions, and its true reality cannot be fully known or measured. As a devotee of definitive statistical science, Einstein argued otherwise. The notion that nature was merely a game of chance ran counter to Einstein’s core beliefs. Adding fuel to the fire of their debate, Bohr’s ideas also contradicted Einstein’s groundbreaking theory of relativity because it speculated that these unpredictable sub-atomic particles could move faster than the speed of light.
This debate has raged on in the many decades since Einstein and Bohr made their professional disagreements public. Professor Al-Khalili sets out to resolve this quandary definitively. As his jumping-off point, he calls upon two key ideas related to quantum mechanics – the EPR paradox and Bell’s inequality – to properly produce his findings.
Unlike many other dense science-based documentaries, this documentary doesn’t play like a boring classroom lecture; it has a real vision for unique and engaging settings. It’s an ambitious undertaking, and it does a masterful job of communicating complex scientific theory through a series of experiments that are easy to understand and fun to observe.