Talk:Raitoshō

Scientific Implausibility
Okay...No. Please, for the love of all things good, don't use incorrect scientific terms in an attempt to explain the inner workings of your technique. It only makes you look foolish.

Molecules do not move at light-speed, since they have mass. If they did, they would violate special relativity, which states that nothing moves at or faster than the speed of light in a vacuum.

"...Use quantum superposition, in which the user teleports by replacing and restocking energy in a spatial behavior." -- That is not the definition of quantum superposition. A quantum system may, at some point in time, theoretically exist in all its possible states (like "Schrōdinger's cat" being simultaneously dead and alive), but when measured, gives only the result of one state. That is quantum superposition. It has absolutely nothing to do with teleportation.

Furthermore, the Heisenburg Uncertainty Principle states that the accurate measurement of one of two related quantities, such as position and momentum, produces uncertainties in the measurement of the other quantity. In other words, you could precisely locate every single particle in the human body, but you would have no idea of the velocities at which they travel. It is necessary to know both quantities in order to properly disassemble and reassemble a human body. Ergo, teleportation by breaking up the molecules of a human and reassembling them in another place is impossible.

I say all of this not to dissuade you from writing or using your technique, but simply to tell you that if you intend to use principles of science, use them correctly. --My name is Raven. Darth Raven. (talk) 22:17, August 7, 2013 (UTC)