I'll be glad to join in a conversation about physics, maybe tomorrow I'll have a sneak peak at that article and comment some topics.
But I'll say something about quantum entanglement and the idea that some physicists don't believe in quantum mechanics. This was a question posted by Darkpriest667:
my major isnt in science or physics.. Its actually history.. But perhaps you would care to explain how entanglement is possible... Seems entanglement and a few other things have really thrown the physics people into two groups... those that believe quantum physics and those that dont.
Quantum physics is not a thing you believe in or don't.
In the beginning it was a theoretical formulation that greatly explained prior problems in physics, and made new predictions, many of which are already experimentally proven. Hence is not a theory per se, is the best model and formalism we now have for explaining things at a micro scale (quantum level). So it's as valid as classical mechanics is when the former explains classical systems (falling bodies, projectile trajectories, etc).
Since physics is a Science (it follows the scientific method in which experimental validation plays the main role), then quantum mechanics is proven to be the best done so far (with amazing experimental success, contrary of some "ideas" spreading around in "books" and in the Internet).
To understand quantum mechanics you must have some bases on physics, although not difficult at all you can imagine why quantum mechanics courses are only at 3rd year of a BSc lever, near the end. So I'm trying not to go too deep in my explanations, anything you didn't get just say so I can clarify.
Entanglement is one of the spooky effects of quantum mechanics. The formalism of quantum mechanics gave birth to a group of predictions a little spooky, never intuitive nor obvious, that made people suspect the formalism. Not quantum mechanics! Einstein made seriously important breakthroughs in quantum theory, although he was critical of the formalism because of some of the spooky effects. Experience, once again, proved Einstein (and many many many physicists at that time) wrong in their fears and strangeness about quantum mechanics.
Experience proved the formalism right (or at least not wrong).
And entanglement is just one of the spooky effects of quantum mechanics, it is experimental verified and theoretically explained. It states that the state of two particles born/created in the same reaction are bond to each other, and hence when you "see" one the other changes apparently faster than light.
It brings an apparent problem of violation of the causality principle (no information can move faster than light), but in entanglement there is no transmission of information that can verified à priori, then it is no violation of that principle.
Nevertheless, it is conceptually difficult to accept. But hey, quantum mechanics has this spooky effects that are experimentally verified, who are we to judge nature for its peculiar and strange phenomena?
The fact that we are not used to some ideas is not an argument for that ideas to be wrong. We are very used to our empirical knowledge of the world, but as we never lived at a quantum scale or (for example) at the speed of light it's natural that some conclusions and theoretical ideas seem absurd to us.
Then again, experimental validation is very important to clarify how nature works, instead of letting us "imagine" or "wish" how it would work with our prior knowledge.