A proposito di
James E. Spinosa
Born in 1955, James Spinosa remembers, as a youngster, being entranced by the science fiction novels he perused in a small, corner bookstore in Denville, New Jersey. The cramped confines of that store had claimed to contain the largest selection of books in northern New Jersey. Often daunted by the difficulty of physics textbooks, he questioned whether physics could be presented as clearly and concisely as science fiction, without sustaining any loss in depth. "Bell's Inequality Untwisted" is an attempt to answer that question. An appreciation of modern art can put you in a frame of mind that allows you to correctly understand Bell's inequality. At some point when studying the works of Mark Rothko, Robert Motherwell, Barnett Newman or even Willem de Kooning you come face to face with the nagging suspicion that there is an underlying lack of truthfulness present. It is similar to the feeling you get while viewing the scholarly introduction to the sci-fi classic "The Mole People."