Didn't he come up with the "Feynman Path Integral"? He said what if we take the double slit and add a third slit, and a fourth, and so on to infinity. And what if we add more barriers with many slits in each along the light path. So then he takes these infinite paths and sums them "the Feynman sum of histories" and this generalizes the double slit interference and its useful probability distributions. I think that's worth some credit, don't you?
Didn't he come up with the "Feynman Path Integral"? He said what if we take the double slit and add a third slit, and a fourth, and so on to infinity. And what if we add more barriers with many slits in each along the light path. So then he takes these infinite paths and sums them "the Feynman sum of histories" and this generalizes the double slit interference and its useful probability distributions. I think that's worth some credit, don't you?
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