Einstein's actual opinion about "spooky action at a distance"
Ultimately, Einstein’s quote “spooky action at a distance” appears in every single article discussing quantum entanglement developments. This phrase is always recalled in a context highlighting how strange quantum entanglement is and often appears to suggest that Einstein did not accept the phenomenon due to its puzzling nature, as if he were not enough open-minded to consider such phenomena. Let us see why that was not exactly the case.
The quote
is often attributed to his famous paper "Can Quantum-Mechanical Description
of Physical Reality be Considered Complete?" written in collaboration with Podolski
and Rosen (often called APR after the initials of the authors). With that
paper, they actually hypothesized for the first time the existence of quantum
entanglement, based on the latest developments in quantum mechanics, and on
Heisenberg's uncertainty principle in particular.
However,
the famous phrase "spooky action at a distance" is not from that
paper but from a private letter of Einstein to Max
Born from 1947 in
which he wrote literally:
"I cannot make a case for my attitude in physics which you would consider at all reasonable. I admit, of course, that there is a considerable amount of validity in the statistical approach which you were the first to recognise clearly as necessary given the framework of the existing formalism. I cannot seriously believe in it because the theory cannot be reconciled with the idea that physics should represent a reality in time and space, free from spooky actions at a distance."
In that text, Einstein does refer to the same phenomenon discussed in the EPR paper, namely quantum entanglement. However, was Einstein really reluctant to accept that phenomenon due to its apparent “spookiness”, or rather he was more puzzled by the physics and math behind it?
It turns
out that entanglement was not the only spooky phenomenon intriguing him at the
time. For example, he was taking seriously the evidence about dowsing and
telepathy. Reportedly, he became a dowser after observing a professional
dowser's work in his garden. In a private letter to Mr. Herman
Peisach he wrote
the following opinion about dowsing:
Dear Mr.
Peisach: 15 February 1946
I read with great interest the reports from your father and I think that they deserve attention. To publish them in the daily press would have little effect. However, if you send these reports to a medical journal, you will have to re-write some of the other aspects that are not really pertinent to this matter.
I know
very well that many scientists consider dowsing as they do astrology, as a type
of ancient superstition. According to my conviction this is, however,
unjustified. The dowsing rod is a simple instrument which shows the reaction of
the human nervous system to certain factors which are unknown to us at this
time.
That the
same circumstances can bring forth nervous difficulties in breathing appears
entirely plausible. However, I do not think there is any connection with the
occurrence of cancer. This latter connection, if true, would not be easy to
prove with supporting statistics.
If you
submit the carefully revised reports to a medical journal you may attach a copy
of my letter, so that this matter will receive the attention I feel it
deserves.
Very truly yours
Einstein
In Germany,
Einstein’s native country, dowsing had been miners’ standard technique in the
16th century (see front image) despite being persecuted by the Catholic Church
as witchcraft. Fortunately, that persecution was discontinued a couple of
centuries later, but even nowadays dowsing continues to be considered by the
public an occult science or an extravagance at best.
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Illustration
from De re metallica, a comprehensive mining treatise from 1556
American
government-funded program Star Gate secretly performed experiments, that proved
that dowsing is a psychic manifestation similar to clairvoyance (called “remote
viewing” by the program’s members) and that both phenomena are absolutely real
and useful. They were found so useful that several governmental organizations
including CIA spent about 20 billion dollars in the program for over 20 years.
That research was declassified after the end of the program in 1995 but today,
the topic is still a taboo, similar to other psi-manifestations.
Another
piece of evidence for Einstein’s open-mindedness about spooky effects usually
considered to be occult science is the fact that he wrote a preface to a book about telepathy, called “Mental Radio”
by prolific writer and Pulitzer winner Upton Sinclair:
I have
read the book of Upton Sinclair with great interest and am convinced that the
same deserves the most earnest consideration, not only of the laity, but also
of the psychologists by profession. The results of the telepathic experiments
carefully and plainly set forth in this book stand surely far beyond those,
which a nature investigator holds to be thinkable. On the other hand, it is out
of the question in the case of so conscientious an observer and writer as Upton
Sinclair that he is carrying on a conscious deception of the reading world; his
good faith and dependability are not to be doubted. So if somehow the facts
here set forth rest not upon telepathy, but upon some unconscious hypnotic
influence from person to person, this also would be of high psychological
interest. In no case should the psychologically interested circles pass over
this book heedlessly.
A.
Einstein May 23, 1930
It turns
out that in 1915 Einstein had already had an experience that had convinced him
about the reality of telepathy. He had invited to his home his friend Sigmund
Freud and a famous psychic, the Polish Wolf Messing. Freud had planned to
perform a telepathic test with Messing. The psychic should execute an order
sent mentally by Freud. As soon as Freud concentrated on sending his order,
Messing got up, went to Einstein's bathroom, and returned with a pair of
tweezers which he used to pull three hairs out of Einstein's mustaches. Freud
immediately explained that that had been precisely his mental order.
Today, one
of Einstein’s favorite spooky effects, quantum entanglement is totally accepted
by the entire scientific community. The other two, dowsing and telepathy are
not yet. Do we have to wait for the birth of another genius for these phenomena
to be accepted and explained once and for all?
Published:
2020-09-30