In fact why don't we all try to re-write the passage in question, they way she should have put it and see if we can come up with something that couldn't be criticised?
I was thinking the same thing.
I think the author failed miserably in her attempt to explain this to a lay audience.
The only ones who seem to have accepted what she has said, are those amongst us who are either physicists or students of physics and, even then, they've had to forgive her extremely messy phraseology.
(I'm sorry, "turning on the light" and "messing up the result" just don't cut it)
The first thing we need to do is to zero in on what exactly it is we are trying to explain and perhaps I'll give that a go first:
Pseudoscientist say that experiments in quantum physics demonstrate that the mind of the observer can shape reality. In other words, that we can change reality with our minds.
This is, of course, a simple misunderstanding of the experiment in question. The experiment we are talking about is, of course, the double slit experiment. Essentially what happens here is that if electrons pass unimpeded from source, through the double slit, to the photographic plate they will form an interference pattern on the plate. If detectors are placed at the slits to detect the passage of electrons, the interfernce pattern changes to a scatter pattern.
That's it, pure and simple
Note that there is no "observer" in that account.
So where does the observer come in?
...it is simply a metaphor for the detection device!
Physicists describe the above by saying: "when we observe which slit the electron passes through, we change the result!"
Pure metaphor.
They don't actually observe which slit the electron passes through - they put detectors there! They could set up the experiment and then go to sleep, lapse into a coma, or die, and the same result would occur. Or they could stay there watching the experiment unfold and they would still get the same result. They could concentrate their minds as hard as they like to try to change the result but it will make no difference - they will get an interference pattern if the detectors are turned off and a scatter pattern if the detectors are turned on.
The observer plays no role at all. He is irrelevant.
How to put this simply?
I think we need to explain it in terms of that metaphor.
Something along the lines of:
Quantum physicists say that the result of their experiments change when they "observe" them. But this is pure metaphor. By "observe" they simply mean that they "turn the detectors on". That's all. In other words, their experimental set up includes devices that detect the presence of electrons and, if they switch them off, they get one pattern and, if they switch them on, they get a different pattern. That's it.
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