This work provides a systematic clarification of quantum physics by removing three persistent sources of confusion: mysticism, paradox-based interpretation, and observer misattribution. Across Papers 454–469 (Part 41), core quantum concepts—state, observable, measurement, probability, wavefunction, time, information, entropy, and quantum limits—are analyzed using strictly operational and structural reasoning, without metaphysical assumptions. Canonical quantum “paradoxes,” including the double-slit experiment, Schrödinger’s cat, and EPR/Bell correlations, are shown to arise from category errors rather than physical contradictions. The observer is clarified as a physical boundary condition and record-forming interaction, not a privileged or conscious agent. The series concludes by stating what quantum theory genuinely asserts about reality, what it does not claim, and how future theories may extend quantum mechanics without contradicting its established structure.
Radhakrishnan Jayaraman (Sun,) studied this question.