When most people think of physics, they think of what they learned in high
school physics: that the world is fundamentally predictable. Given the position
and velocity of a particle in space, it should be possible to predict its
position at any moment in the future, right? Though this was thought to be true
for thousands of years, recent developments in the field of physics have shown
that this isn't actually true. Instead of being fundamentally predictable, the
universe is fundamentally unpredictable. However, this doesn't seem to make
sense. What happened to the centuries of physics developed by Newton,
Bernoulli, and Lagrange? Well, as it turns out, they weren't actually wrong.
Their equations were actually an approximation of a formula called the
wavefunction, which is the "Newton's Laws" equivalent for modern physics. In
this paper, we'll take a look at this peculiar wavefunction and why our
intuition about the world is completely wrong.Comment: 12 pages, common guide to the wavefunction, beginner