 Tonight we are going to have some quantum physics, so hold on to your hat, because Kansas is going bye-bye. Okay, well, tonight we are going scientific. We have come at it from the religious and the spiritual and the philosophical. We are going science tonight. I met Gordon today and I thought, oh, Gordon would love a science night here. And we were having great discussions. Gordon was telling me about the probes and the ships that have been set up to explore the solar system. And they are reporting back that the laws of gravity do not hold. And just that very idea that gravity seems to be such a common thing. When we are studying physics and we are studying science in high school and college, you know, that is one of the laws that you just think are just there. One of the laws of the universe, not something that is flexible or plant that may or may not be true. And so tonight we are going to go into science and before we get too deep into it, let's go back. Europe has a lot to do with science. Who remembers Copernicus? No, never met him. Never met him? Not personally. Copernicus came along. A lot of these people that come along in science, they are kind of like outcast and black sheep. You know, when we have Europe, we have the church, we have what the church says and all of a sudden the scientists come along. Anybody remember what Copernicus was famous for? Yes. The woman from France has got it. It seems as if before Copernicus everybody believed that the earth was like the center of the universe and that the sun and the planets all revolved around earth. So he comes along and this novel idea that no earth and the planets revolve around our sun and our solar system, that's a pretty big reversal. Think of all the centuries ahead of Copernicus that they had it wrong and then Copernicus comes along. And then Sir Isaac Newton, anybody remember Newton? Yes. Most of the science that we learned when we were going to high school and university and everything was Newtonian physics. So we can trace it back to Isaac Newton and the laws of the universe that we have. And tonight we're going to go even a little deeper to quantum physics. Now quantum physics has been around for maybe six and a half decades. Some of you remember splitting the atom and some of the early work with subatomic particles, Max Planck and of course Einstein was very famous for splitting the atom and so on and so forth and nuclear power and so forth. But what we're looking at here in quantum physics is basically that Isaac Newton came up with the scientific method, used instruments to measure about the objects that we perceive in this world and come up with the laws of physics that govern the objects of this world. And when quantum physics came along they were doing these experiments and they started to find out very strange things with these experiments because they found out that things appeared in the experiments based on where the experimenter wanted them to appear. Which is not good for scientific method because it gets kind of subjective if the outcome of the experiment is influenced by the consciousness of the experiment. And so what we're going to do is start off tonight with kind of a cartoon that's at the end of this movie, what the bleep down the rabbit hole. And then we'll get into talking about some quantum physics concepts like superposition. How many in the room have heard of superposition before? Okay, it's like a real basic fundamental law of quantum physics but it's mind blowing. Even the simplest of concepts in quantum physics are absolutely mind blowing. So we'll have Thomas roll it. We're first going to watch a clip. This is a cartoon that basically is designed to show you that beyond what we know as two dimensions and three dimensions, there are other dimensions that are still incomprehensible to the mind. Thomas just hasn't reached a state of advancement yet to be able to comprehend these. This little skit is showing how frightening it can seem when your mind is accustomed to example what if it was all two dimensional world and suddenly a third dimension was introduced in a two dimensional world. It can seem very frightening because it seems to go beyond what is known into the unknown. And so this little skit Thomas is going to show is from the very end of down the rabbit hole.