Schrödinger's cat is a thought experiment, usually described as a paradox, devised by Austrian physicist Erwin Schrödinger in 1935. It illustrates what he saw as the problem of the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics applied to everyday objects. The thought experiment presents a cat that might be alive or dead, depending on an earlier random event. In the course of developing this experiment, he coined the term Verschränkung (entanglement).
Literature
It was not long before science-fiction writers picked up this evocative concept, often using it in a humorous vein. Several have taken the thought experiment a step further, pointing out extra complications that could arise should the experiment actually be performed. For example, in his novel American Gods, Neil Gaiman has a character observe, "if they don't ever open the box to feed it, it'll eventually just be two different kinds of dead." Likewise, Terry Pratchett's Lords and Ladies adds the issue of a third possible state, in the case of Greebo, "Bloody Furious". (In Pratchett's later novel The Last Hero, Death attempts the experiment himself, but cannot understand the mechanics of it, wondering if it implies that he will kill the cat just by looking at it.) In Will Grayson, Will Grayson, by John Green and David Levithan, the Cat makes an appearance as an analogy for Will and Jane's relationship.
Robert Anton Wilson wrote a trilogy of novels dealing with themes related to quantum mechanics, collectively known as the Schrödinger's Cat trilogy.
Douglas Adams describes an attempt to enact the experiment in Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency. By using clairvoyance to see inside the box, it was found that the cat was neither alive nor dead, but missing, and Dirk's services were employed in order to recover it, Dirk deducing that the cat had simply grown tired of being subjected to the experiment and wandered off (although he admits later that he was actually using the experiment as an attempt to determine the mental state of his friend Richard Macduff, Richard's logical arguments about why the experiment was pointless confirming that he was mentally stable).
In Libba Bray's book Going Bovine, three stoners argue whether the cat is alive or dead, or whether the person who opens the box creates the possibilities. There are constant references to a band called Copenhagen Interpretation, who disappear into thin air in the middle of a benefit concert.
In Adam Felber's comic first novel, Schrödinger's Ball (2006), Dr. Erwin Schrödinger is a character, and there is much exploration of quantum mechanics.
In the short story "Schrödinger's Cat-Sitter" by F. Gwynplaine MacIntyre (published in Analog magazine, July/August 2001), a time-traveler named Smedley Faversham visits the past to interview Erwin Schrödinger but gets tricked into taking care of Schrödinger's wife's cat while she is away and Schrödinger is visiting Max Planck. In attempting to take care of the cat, Faversham inadvertently locks it in a cabinet with a Geiger counter, a vial of acid, and a hammer, unintentionally enacting Schrödinger's thought experiment, but with results that remain as uncertain as in the original case.
The title character (though not a main character) of Robert A. Heinlein's The Cat Who Walks Through Walls, a kitten named Pixel, is of indeterminate existence, and as such, has the ability to turn up in places that are specifically sealed to outside access. When this ability is questioned, the answer is "He's Schrödinger's cat," leading to the response, "Then Schrödinger had better come get him."
In Glynne MacLean's 2009 short story Viennese Meow Schrödinger's cat tells his version of the famous thought experiment.
In the S.M. Stirling "T2" novel trilogy, John Connor mentally compares his, Skynet's technology and ultimately everyone's existence to the Schröedinger principle of entropy.
In the Hellsing manga series by Kouta Hirano, one of the depicted Nazis is an artificial catboy named Schrödinger. He claims that he is everywhere and nowhere at the same time, which is similar to the cat being alive and dead at the same time. It is also said that he can only exist as long as he is aware of himself. In the second anime adaption, he eventually allows himself to be absorbed by the vampire Alucard, which causes his awareness to be clouded. This then spreads to Alucard, who vanishes for thirty years. Alucard returns after destroying the millions of souls within himself, giving him access to all of Schrödinger's abilities.
On a somewhat more serious level, Ian Stewart's novel Flatterland, (a sequel to Flatland) attempts to explain many concepts in modern mathematics and physics through the device of having a young female Flatlander explore other parts of the "Mathiverse". Schrödinger's Cat is just one of the many strange Mathiverse denizens she and her guide meet; the cat is still uncertain whether it is alive or dead, long after it left the box. Her guide, the Space Hopper, reassures the Cat with a modern view of quantum decoherence. Ursula K. Le Guin wrote a story entitled "Schrödinger's Cat" in 1974 (reprinted in The Compass Rose, published in 1982), which also deals with decoherence. Greg Egan's novel Quarantine, billed as "a story of quantum catastrophe", features an alternative solution to the paradox: in Egan's version of quantum mechanics, the wave function does not collapse naturally. Only certain living thingsâ"human beings among themâ"collapse the wave function of things they observe. Humans are therefore highly dangerous to other lifeforms which require the full diversity of uncollapsed wavefunctions to survive.
In the 2003 novel Vernon God Little by DBC Pierre, the concept is discussed by the Vernon and Jesus characters. It is erroneously attributed by Jesus to the German philosopher Immanuel Kant.
In the play Schrödinger's Girlfriend, the future Nobel Prize winner finds himself falling under the spell of cabaret singer and seductress Hansi Haas, who has already had her way with Einstein, Planck and Bohr. As he wrestles with his love and the problems of wave theory, Hass throws him over for Paul Dirac, revealing a truth that holds for both love and quantum physics: "if you never ask the question, the answer can still be yes." (Review of play at Playbill)
MacSchrödinger's Cat, a 2010 novel by James Conor O'Brien, is a multi-verse romp across the universes centering on Venice and involves a search for a missing scientific experiment concerning a trans-dimensional cat, with Janis Joplin as God, and a panoply of caricatures of physics and physicists ranging from James Clerk Maxwell and Schrödinger to String Theory, the Big Bang and infinitely annoyed monkeys.
To Say Nothing of the Dog tells the tale of a man named Ned Henry who travels back in time to from 2057 to 1888 to find and return a cat named Princess Arjumand to her owner. In his journey back through time, Ned finds the cat packed away in a covered basket and alludes to the lifelessness of her as they travel down the Thames. It is later discovered that in 1888 the butler, Baine, attempted to drown Princess Arjumand by throwing the box she was in into the Thames, only to be rescued by Verity, another time traveler, and brought to 2057. Many descriptions of Princess Arjumand in this book point back to how she might or should have perished in the Thames but was now alive through an action that occurred and its improbability, alluding specifically to the paradox created in the thought experiment that is created by Schrödinger's cat.
Before Watchmen: Nite Owl/Dr. Manhattan, a 2014 graphic novel written by J. Michael Straczynski with artwork by Adam Hughes, refers to Schrödinger's cat several times in discussing quantum mechanics and the many different paths that history might take.
Animals other than cats
Fiction writers have confined other animals besides cats in such contraptions. Dan Simmons's novel Endymion begins with hero Raul Endymion sentenced to death by imprisonment in a "Schrödinger box".
KÅsuke Fujishima's manga series Ah! My Goddess featured a play on Schrödinger's Cat. During one storyline, a storage room was expanded to infinite proportions and the main characters encountered a Schrödinger's Whale, an extremely rare species with the ability to travel through space-time in a five-dimensional quantum state. The male lead in the series, Keiichi Morisato, befriends the whale and teaches it songs by real-life musical group The Carpenters (in the original English translation, it was Matthew Sweet) - but their time spent together is short, for the whale must move on or risk its safety as its wave function collapses. Because of this need to keep moving through quantum states, Schrödinger's Whales hardly ever meet, the reason they are so thin on the ground â" but miraculously, Keiichi secured the future of the species by teaching it the songs. After discovering the whale had gone, he found out that it had learned Only Yesterday by itself (Missing Time in the translation) - this gave the whales a call that they could locate each other by.
Poetry
- Cecil Adams, Schrödingerâs Cat: an Epic Poem
- Gwen Harwood, Schrödingerâs Cat Preaches to the Mice
- Hollis Robbins, His Paws Upon the Dish
Television
- In the Phineas and Ferb episode, "Lost in Danville" (2014), when an unknown capsule lands in the yard, Baljeet theorizes that it could contain a whole litter of Schrödinger's cats.
- In the Silicon Valley episode, "Binding Arbitration" (2015), Gilfoyle and Dinesh reference the experiment as it relates to Richard's arbitration hearing. Jared also makes the comment saying, "Does that mean that all of us who attend open casket funerals are murderers?"
- In the Stargate SG-1 episode, "Enigma" (1998), Samantha Carter gives a pet cat named Schrödinger to Narim. After explaining the name Schrödinger, Narim comments that his society calls that concept Kulivrian physics. Narim's response to Carter's inquiry about whether or not he has studied it is: "Yes, I've studied it...among other misconceptions of elementary science."
- In the Futurama episode, "Mars University" (1999), Professor Farnsworth is lecturing on the effects of quantum neutrino fields and the blackboard behind him displays an explanation of "Superdupersymmetric String Theory" and a diagram explaining "Witten's Dog". Witten's Dog, named after Ed Witten, is a parody of the classic Schrödinger's cat paradox. Astrophysicist David Schiminovich created both the equations and the diagram, based on "an equation that constrains the mass density of neutrinos in the universe". Also the episode, "Law and Oracle" (2011), features an extended car chase scene in which Police Officer Fry apprehends Erwin Schrödinger, who is transporting a box containing "a cat, some poison and a cesium atom." When asked if the cat is alive or dead, Schrödinger responds that "it is a superposition of both states, until you open it and collapse the wave-function." Upon opening the box, Fry finds a living cat, who attacks him, while his partner discovers "there's also a lot of drugs in there." It is later revealed that the cat has agreed to testify against Schrödinger.
- In the Doctor Who audio adventure Zagreus, the Eighth Doctor is transformed into the destructive Zagreus after he is exposed to an anti-time explosion after he was forced to use his TARDIS to contain it- anti-time being as destructive to time as anti-matter is to matter-, but shifts between his own personality and the 'Zagreus' personality, realising that as long as he remains in the TARDIS, the universe cannot decide which personality is in control, noting the similarities between this situation and the Schrödinger's Cat experiment.
- In the Numb3rs episode "Identity Crisis" (2005), Charlie Eppes and Larry Fleinhardt discuss the Schrödinger's cat paradox in relation to how can a man be both guilty and not guilty of a crime.
- In the Yu-Gi-Oh! GX episode, "It's All Relative" (2006 Japan, 2007 USA), Dr. Eisenstein uses a card known as "Schrödinger's Cat", which allows him when he draws outside his Draw Phase to shuffle the drawn cards back into his deck and draw the same number of cards again.
- In The Big Bang Theory episode, "The Tangerine Factor" (May 19, 2008), Leonard's attempt to arrange a date with Penny results in both Penny and Leonard's seeking Sheldon's advice. Sheldon advises Penny that "just like Schrödinger's cat being alive and dead at the same time", her date with Leonard currently has both "good and bad" probabilistic outcomes. The only way to find out is to "open the box", in other words collapse the wave-function of an uncertain date into a specific outcome. Also, in the episode "The Russian Rocket Reaction" (October 13, 2011), Sheldon characterizes his relationship to Leonard as "Schrödinger's friendship", in the sense that Leonard is simultaneously his friend and mortal enemy (as he may or may not attend Wil Wheaton's party). When Sheldon tries to explain the paradox to Penny, she gives an approximate description: "...] there's this cat in a box and until you open it, it's either dead or alive or both [...]". Penny references it during a brief conversation with her new boyfriend in "The Codpiece Topology" (September 29, 2008), and Leonard references it during lunch with the guys in "The Bus Pants Utilization" (January 6, 2011).
- In Season 1, episode 6 of FlashForward, "Scary Monsters and Super Creeps" (2009), Simon references Schrödinger's Cat as he is trying to explain why the blackouts happened. He describes it using the metaphor of holding a tiny cat in a closed hand with a poisoned sardine. If the cat eats the sardine, he will die; if not, he will live. But the outcome will be unknown until the hand is opened. Until then, the cat may be both alive and dead simultaneously, with reality ultimately being decided upon the intrusion of an observer.
- Charlie Brooker, on his program Newswipe (2009), refers to the media coverage of Jade Goody's death as paradoxical in the same way that Schrödinger's cat is. He shows a visual metaphor using a stuffed cat to explain, then comments,"But that's the Copenhagen Interpretation of quantum mechanics for you."
- Nearly a third of an episode of the series, Sayonara, Zetsubou-Sensei is devoted to Schrödinger's cat, referencing it in the way that there are infinite possibilities for anything in a box. Examples include Schrödinger's lunch box (which may or may not have mold), Schrödinger's boxed-wives (which could all possibly be ideal), and refusing to face reality (by boxing things with possibly bad outcomes).
- In Space Dandy's season 2 episode "I can't be the only one, Baby", which centers on string theory, one of the alternate dimension versions of main character Meow is a Schrödingarian, an alien race composed by literal Schrödinger's cats.
- In "Rick and Morty" season two episode one, Rick and his grandchildren become trapped in a plane of uncertainty after fracturing time. The plane is a nearly featureless void, but a number of Schrödinger's cats can be seen floating around, evidently due to them being uncertainties themselves.
- In season 10 of Bones, Dr. Brennan tells a joke referencing Schrödinger's cat.
- In "Myriad Colors Phantom World" episode 7 Schrödinger's cat is both described at the beginning and used as a plot device for the episode.
- In the anime Hellsing Ultimate, Schrödinger's Cat is a male human with feminine and feline appearances, named Schrödinger. Schrödinger is said to be a paradox, being "everywhere, yet nowhere." He cut his own head off and his blood was adsorbed by Alucard, which mixed with the blood of all the souls Alucard absorbed, thus tainting Alucard and making him a paradox. Alucard faded away, but returned after several decades claiming to have killed off all souls he absorbed except one. He claims he's now "everywhere, yet nowhere," implying that the last soul is actually Schrödinger's
- In Season 4 of "Person of Interest", Root refers to Schrödinger's Cat when speaking to John about Shaw's unknown fate.
Film
- In A Serious Man (2009), written by the Coen Brothers, protagonist Larry Gopnik mentions Schrödinger's Cat in a discussion about the unpredictability of future events.
- In Repo Men (2010), Jude Law's character mentions the Schrödinger's cat example in the beginning of the movie.
- In 6 Films to Keep You Awake: The Baby's Room (2006), a Spanish made-for-TV movie, a journalist, Domingo, describes Schrödinger's Cat to the protagonist, Juan, in order to explain the existence of parallel worlds.
- In The Prestige (2006), Nikola Tesla uses a cat to demonstrate a machine he makes for The Great Danton.
- In Prince of Darkness (1987), Walter and Catherine have a discussion about Schrödinger's Cat, with Catherine understanding and Walter not.
- In the made-for-television movie Mean Girls 2 one of the characters wears a shirt written "Save the Schrödinger's Cat".
- In the short film Dead and Alive] (2013), by Desert Eagle Pictures, the situation of the main character Cynthia runs parallel in many ways to that of the Schrödinger's Cat thought experiment. The distinction is most evident in the classroom scene, where a high school physics teacher gives a lecture on the aforementioned feline.
- In the low-budget science fiction movie Coherence (2013), Schrödinger's Cat is the principle driving the alternative universes that occur during the movie.
Video games
- In Digital Devil Saga, a game produced by Atlus, there is an enigmatic cat-like creature revealed to have some connection to God, whom the main character can see throughout the games. His name is Schrödinger.
- In Wild Arms 3, the character of Shady the Cat, owned by Maya Schrödinger, is based on Schrödinger's cat, and is claustrophobic as a result of the "experiment".
- In NetHack, one of the monsters encountered in this roguelike game is called 'Quantum Mechanic', which often carries a chest. The chest either contains a cat corpse, or causes a cat to appear. Reading the source code to the game also reveals that the game does not determine the state of the cat until the chest is opened.
- In Pop'n Music, a song titled Schrödinger's Cat was composed by Tomosuke Funaki for the arcade version of Pop'n Music 16 PARTY. It is credited as the first song in the series with a 43 difficulty rating, the highest difficulty level in the series.
- In Portal, GLaDOS tried to replicate the experiment with the scientists from Aperture Science, and she settled that the cat was dead. In the ending of its sequel, Portal 2, the Fact Sphere might say "The Schrödinger's cat paradox outlines a situation in which a cat in a box must be considered, for all intents and purposes, simultaneously alive and dead. Schrödinger created this paradox as a justification for killing cats." In the publicity web-comic for the game, the fate of the protagonist Chell is a reference to Schrödinger's Cat. GLaDOS also mentions a "bring your cat to work day" and that she has the boxes and the neurotoxins (poison) and just needs the cats. There is also an achievement called Schrödinger's Catch, awarded when the player catches a blue box before it touches the ground, after it is broken out of a glass receptacle.
- In Rock Band, a daily battle of the bands was entitled Schrödinger's Cat. It featured the songs "Alive" by Pearl Jam, "Dead" by The Pixies and "Wanted Dead or Alive" by Bon Jovi.
- In Gundeadligne, the first stage is "Le chat noir de Schrödinger - Schrödinger's Black Cat", This stage's boss is called "Chatnoir", whose appearance is that of a Cat girl (nekomimi).
- In Elements the Game, Schrödinger's Cat is an Entropy creature that has an ability Dead and Alive. This activates death effects without killing the cat.
- In the visual novel Umineko no Naku Koro ni, episode 3, the main character Battler uses Schrödinger's Cat in his battle against the witch Beatrice to deny the existence of magic. The remainder of the visual novel continuously refers to this as "cat box".
- In BlazBlue: Continuum Shift, after a fight between Tager and Lambda-11, during Tager's storyline, Kokonoe references Lambda-11 and Tager being similar to two Schrödinger's Cats. Also Terumi is both dead and alive, and can only exist as long as he is being observed, but in this case being observed might be an emotional response to his actions.
- In BioShock 2, hidden within a mass of ice, there is a deceased cat. Upon melting the ice and closely examining it, the display reads "Schrödinger".
- In Zero Escape: Virtue's Last Reward, there is a book named Schrödinger's Cat in one room, and the thought experiment is eventually used in two parts of the game's plot; the identity of the masked person known as K is different in different endings, and whether or not the old woman is dead or alive also depends on the ending.
- In Borderlands 2, Patricia Tannis makes mention of Schrödinger's "zombie cat" being to blame when describing the possibility that digistructed loot chests might contain either great loot or "nothing but crappy white shields".
- In Ghost Trick: Phantom Detective, we have two examples: Yomiel, the original bad guy, who was a man that was neither alive nor dead, as his body constantly regenerated because of the power of a meteorite that entered his back and lodged in his heart; and Sissel which becomes a more literal example after going 10 years in the past to save his master Yomiel from such fate, but in turn the meteorite lodged inside the black cat himself, allowing him to be both dead and alive.
- In PuzzleCraft, when farming, a treasure chest will occasionally contain one cat. The first time this happens the player unlocks the "Schrödinger's Cat" achievement.
- In Final Fantasy XIII-2 and Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII, there is a subspecies of the popular 'Cait Sith' creature called 'Schrödinger'. It appears as a grey cat sitting in a light blue pot.
- In Schrödinger's Cat and the Raiders of The Lost Quark, a game developed by ItalicPig and Team17(known for the Worms franchise), you play as the titular feline.
Card games
- In Force of Will, A character/card bearing the name "Schrödinger, the Fallen Black Cat" is featured as both a character within the story and a Regalia that lives in a constant state of life and death whose primary ability is to swallow and regurgitate his meals as his new minions. Both his state of life and his life to death capabilities are a formable reference to the very paradox.
Web comics
- One of the earliest xkcd strips, titled "Schrodinger", is based on Schrödinger's paradox
- Dresden Codak features a Schrödinger strip
- LukeSurl.com features a Charles Dickens and Schrödinger strip
- UserFriendly.org featured a single pane comic about the state of the cat as being the only legitimate use for an HTML blink tag.
- Cyanide and Happiness features a "90% of the General Public Won't Understand Week", Strip with a reference to Schrödinger and his cat
- "Toothpaste for Dinner" by Drew Fairweather has featured parodies of Schrödinger's cat, including "Schrödinger's Decaf" in 2005 and "Schrödinger's birthday present" in 2009.
- The website Abstruse Goose features a series of comics "Schrödingerâs Miscalculation"
- The Order of the Stick features a strip about "Schrödinger's Ninjas" in its first book.
- Questionable Content mentions Schrödinger's cat in its own absurd extrapolation from the Copenhagen interpretation
- Hello With Cheese did a joke about "Schrödinger's Fart" in their very first comic, January 5th, 2009.
- Zach Weiner's Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal features a one panel misunderstanding Schrödinger's Cat, as well as a contrast between the actual meaning of the absurdity of the paradox and how it is popularly interpreted.
- Patrick Connelly's Schrödinger features comics around Schrödinger the cat
- MS Paint Adventures, in an extra from the Problem Sleuth adventure, the Midnight Crew used Schrödinger's cat to deal with a meddlesome wasp. The fate of Nepeta Leijon of Homestuck also references Schrödinger's cat.
- In Irregular Webcomic, the MythBusters test the Copenhagen interpretation by conducting the thought experiment in practice in these strips.
- Laika & Qubit is a weekly web comic featuring Soviet space dog, Laika, and Schrödinger's cat, Qubit, on a surreal adventure by Paul K. Tunis.
- Brewster Rockit comic in one of the "Rockit Science" theme Sunday Comic strip opens the box with comic results and has the great line of "This Rockit Science moment is brought to you by the makers of Schrödinger's cat-litter box. If you don't observe it, you don't have to change it." Brewster Rockit comic where they open the box to "settle this once and for all"
- In The Noob Comic, Schrödinger's cat is featured on a blackboard in a lecture about how to exploit Clichequest's (the game the comic takes place in) bugs using string theory; the drawing of the box with the cat in it accompanied by the question "If dead, does it drop any loot?".
- GoblynsComics featured Schrödinger's cat, "out of the bag", in March 29, 2013 comic.
- Stupidity and Bliss featured Schrödinger's catfish, "Schrödinger's box", in Nov 11, 2014 comic.
- Dilbert featured Schrödinger's cat in some comics in 2013.
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- This comic in June where the cat is referred to as a zombie
- This comic in June where the cat discusses the afterlife
- This comic in December where Dogbert presents Dilbert with the cat as a Christmas gift
- [1] B.C.]a well known metaphysical-daft-dictionary/prehistoric strip, defines "lost and found"as being Schrödinger's cat
- The Friday, August 26, 2016 Tom the Dancing Bug featured a reference to Schrödinger's cat.
Music
- Eyedea: On the "Infrared Roses" track from his 2001 CD, The Many Faces of Oliver Hart, Eyedea proclaims, "The curiosity that killed Schrödinger's cat was the only thing that kept it alive, matter of fact".
- Mark Rosengarten: On his 2007 CD, Schrodinger's Cat Strikes Back, this high-school chemistry teacher performs a song that humorously depicts Schrödinger's Cat getting her revenge for such a diabolical idea.
- Tears for Fears: The track titled, "Schrodinger's Cat", is featured as a B-side on Tears for Fears' single, "Break It Down Again".
- The Ghost of a Saber Tooth Tiger: Sean Lennon (son of John) and Charlotte Kemp Muhl released a song entitled "Schroedinger's Cat" on their 2010 album "Acoustic Sessions." The lyrics apply principles from quantum mechanics to relationships with the line, "Can't be sure that I exist when you are not around."
- The song Love and Hatred by The Crüxshadows features the lyrics, "Can you hear the cat within the box, can you hear electrons moving free, watching something, watching nothing, in status somewhere in between..."
- Ukrainian underground metal-band Code Veronica released a song entitled "Shroedinger's Cat (feat. x_Remytia_x)" on their 2009 album "ТеоÑÑÑ ÑÑÑÑн".
- The 1994 album "You Forgot To Answer" by Barry Guy, Mats Gustafsson and Raymond Strid features a track called "Schrödinger's Cat."
- P.O.S (rapper): "sleepdrone/superposition" released in 2016 includes the line "There's more than one way to skin Schrödinger's Cat."
Merchandise
- The ecommerce website ThinkGeek sells a t-shirt based on the Schrödinger's cat experiment. One side of the shirt reads, "Schrödinger's cat is dead." The other side reads, "Schrödinger's cat is not dead." This parodies the concept of the cat being both dead and alive. The site also sells a shirt for women which reads "Hello Schroddy", and features a white box with a red bow, being a play on both Schrödinger's Cat and Hello Kitty. The description reads, "This might not be Hello Kitty. It might be Goodbye Kitty. We cannot possibly know without observing, and then we change the outcome." ThinkGeek also sells a box with a sliding door, which activates an internal electronic display to show an animation of either a living or deceased cat. The box has a sign reading "WARNING: MAY OR MAY NOT CONTAIN LIVE ANIMAL". A relatively new product is a pair of drinking mugs; when full of hot liquid one shows a live cat and the other a dead one.
- The website Shirt.woot! offers four shirts based on the cat. First, a psychedelic t-shirt based on the cat; second, a t-shirt featuring the formula as a calligram in the shape of a cat; third, The Cat in the Box by Dr. Schrödinger, a parody of Dr. Seuss' Cat in the Hat.; fourth, a Venn diagram, with the cat in the intersection between alive and dead.
- The website SnorgTees sells a shirt displaying a wanted poster that reads: "Schrodinger's Cat: Wanted Dead & Alive."
- The website TeeTurtle sells a shirt with a glow-in-the-dark design that has a cat and reads "Schrödinger's Cat Is ALIVE" when bright; the eyes cross out and reverts to read "Schrödinger's Cat Is DEAD" in the dark.
References
External links
- Poem by Cecil Adams
- Discussion about the Schrödinger's Cat at the Copenhagen Interpretation Fantasy Camp: Djinn and Juice
- Schrodinger's cat versus Darwin