 |
Episode Information |
| |
| Title: | Scary Monsters and Super Creeps |
| Episode #: | 01x06 |
| Production Number: | 106 |
| Original Airdate: | Thursday October 29th, 2009 |
|
| | Other Release Dates: (Edit) | | Country: | Aired On: | |
UK (five) |
Nov 02, 2009 |
|
|
 |
Click here to Start a conversation about this episode. (13 Posts) |
|
|
|
 |
Episode Summary |
| |
[x] Remove Ad
Janis winds up on Olivia's operating table, and survives, but barely. Demetri and Al head out in search of those behind the attack and find new information. Dylan inadvertently brings Mark, Lloyd, and Olivia face to face, with harsh results. And Simon confronts Lloyd about his reluctance in regards to The Event.
| | There are no foreign summaries for this episode: Contribute | | English Recap Available: View Here |
| |
|
 |
Guest Stars |
| |
|
 |
Main Cast |
| |
|
 |
Episode Notes |
| |
There is no such thing as a "Robert Wilson Award." Science fiction author Robert Anton Wilson wrote the Schrödinger's Cat Trilogy, which is what Simon uses to explain his theory about The Event. |
|
 |
Featured Songs |
| |
| Artist | Song Title | Played When | | •Rufus Wainwright | Across The Universe | When Lloyd/Dylan Simcoe are back at the hospital | | •Sea Wolf | Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps) | When Mark is chasing the masked guy |
|
 |
Episode Quotes |
| |
Simon: I know what caused the flashforward. (long pause) You don't believe me.
Camille: Well of course I do. The world's greatest mystery's been solved by a boozer on a train bound for Los Angeles. | Simon: Are you aware of the Double Slit Experiment?
Camille: Well, there was that one time in college...
Simon: What about Schrödinger's cat?
Camille: No, I'm not that kinky. | Aaron: Was that a kangaroo?
Charlie Benford: That was the best costume I have ever seen. | Lloyd: Our experiment killed 20 million people, Simon. What more is there to say? |
|
 |
Episode References |
| |
A figure of 20 million dead as a result of The Event is given by one of the characters. |
|
 |
Analysis |
| |
Simon: ...Schrödinger's cat...
Schrödinger's cat is a classic thought experiment in quantum physics. Simon's description is almost completely accurate, but it fails in that the life or death of the cat is left up to the cat's choice of "to eat or not to eat" the poison fish. The woman he approaches spots this flaw, in fact. In a properly constructed experiment, all choice is left out of it, and the release of a poison gas which kills the cat if it is released is left to totally random chance, as by a geiger counter recieving a certain number of clicks from a mildly radioactive material also in the box. The state of the cat is also not, as suggested by Simon, left to the observer's choice, but left to the observer to discover, which is not the same thing at all. The key issue here is that the cat is in what is called an "indeterminate state", neither alive nor dead (or both at once, if you prefer) until the observer accesses the box in some fashion to determine the fate of the cat. It is the action of observation which seals the fate of the cat. It seems very counterintuitive, but there are many experiments on the microscopic scale which demonstrate the validity of the concept. In real life, such situations are impossible to create on a "macro" scale, which is why we never experience such things, and it seems to run against common sense. |
|
 |
Other Episode Crew |
| |
| |
 |
Episode Goofs |
| |
|   |
 |
Cultural References |
| |
|   |