Just a weird thought -
- In physics, event horizons are a barrier beyond which physicists generally claim that things inside don't matter (besides the mass and momentum) because we can't observe them. For some reason, they reject the idea of "god's eye view of objective reality" beyond the event horizon of a black hole, and settling on the idea that since it is impossible even in theory to get information out from the black hole, it's better to just treat it as an opaque thing.
But generally they don't (want to) extend this subjective view to either quantum physics, and they definitely don't posit the subjective notion that if you can't observe something, it might as well not exist until you look at it. It seems that the principle is the same. To me there is no qualitative difference between theoretical impossibility and practical impossibility. The difference is imaginary.
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