Do we live in one of many parallel worlds, with near-identical versions of ourselves spread across the multiverse? Is a uantum leap?unthinkably massive or subatomically small? The language and the imagery of quantum mechanics are ubiquitous, yet the sciencend its journey into everyday languagetill confounds us. In The Quantum Moment, Robert P. Crease and Alfred Scharff Goldhaber tell how a controversial idea from an obscure branch of optics grew in complexity and authority, eventually dominating the scientific community and commanding the attention of the culture at large. Recounting fiery disputes between figures including Einstein, Schr鐰inger, and Pauli, the authors trace popular imagesime travel, parallel worlds, random behaviorack to their scientific roots and uncover modern manifestations in everything from architecture and sculpture to the prose of John Updike. The Quantum Moment combines an exhilarating history of the quantum with shrewd insight into our experience of the everyday.