Schrodinger's unlucky cat Schrodinger's cat proposed the original text: Schrodinger published a paper entitled "The Present Situation of Quantum Mechanics" at 1935. In the fifth part of the paper, Schrodinger describes the cat experiment, which is often regarded as a nightmare: the Copenhagen school said that before measurement, the state of a particle was fuzzy and in a state of. For example, when radioactive atoms decay is completely random. As long as there is no observation, it will be in the superposition state of decay/non-decay, and only when it is actually measured will a state be randomly selected. So let's put this atom in an opaque box and keep it in this superposition state. Now Schrodinger imagines a precise device with ingenious structure. Every time an atom decays and releases a neutron, it will trigger a series of chain reactions. The final result is to break a poison gas bottle in the box, and there is also a poor cat in the box. The thing is obvious: if the atom decays, the poison gas bottle will be broken and the cat will be poisoned. If atoms don't decay, then cats live well.
If it is to be applied to pedagogy, the most important thing is the attitude towards students, which may affect children's future.