Quantum theory did not ask for fame.
It did not request metaphor, drama, or moral panic.
It quietly provided a disciplined account of what may be actualised, and under which conditions.
But we, impatient, curious, and prone to mischief, insisted on stories.
We imagined cats in boxes, friends peering through consciousness, secret variables lurking behind the scenes, entire worlds multiplying beyond necessity.
We demanded a narrative where none was owed.
This series of dialogues examines what happens next:
how human imagination, faced with the refusal of a theory to answer the wrong question, went to work inventing consolations.
Professor Quillibrace, master of relational clarity, is joined by the ever-confused Mr Blottisham, and the positively inclined Miss Elowen Stray.
Together, they trace the strange afterlives of our misunderstandings.
They ask: What do these responses say about us, rather than about the theory?
And, as always, they reveal how the ontology itself remains quietly unbothered.
The series is both diagnosis and amusement:
a testament to what happens when we try to fill a gap that never existed.
Prepare to meet cats, friends, worlds, and ghosts—not as features of reality, but as mirrors of our impatience.
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