Oh, it’s very
spooky. First of all, probability by itself is spooky. Give me…let me show you
how probability enters the [sample]. You walk past a store window and you see an image of
yourself in the store window, you straighten the part, not so bad you know, for
a man of my age. The guy in the store window who's fooling around with
mannequins he sees you and you see yourself. What does that mean? A [beam] of photons from sunlight leaves your face, heads for the store window -
let's consider one of them. It has a choice: it can go right through, so that
the guy behind the window can see you, or it can be reflected from the store
window. Some [actions] of them are reflected, and some of them go
through. What determines that? What determines the future of that photon? And [doubtless] such examples
teach us that it's random, that it's a [roll]of the dice, and
that's where Einstein made his famous statement "God plays dice with the
universe." That every instant of that single object, that quantum object
we have probability, we do not have certainty.