Studies claiming a link between cell phone use and brain tumors and experiments pointing to pathologic effects are much more convincing than arguments basedon basic physics.
How can we reconcile these two opposite thoughts: the impossibility of an association basedon the physics of trajectories, and the improbability of coincidence (lack of association) that the math suggests?
What Rushkoff and Malik are describing is a new experience of physics for humans, more akin to magic or at least quantum mechanics than to the classical Newtonian physicson which the modern world was based.
Quantum Conundrum (QC), by Airtight Games, is the latest contender to the crown of physics-based puzzlers in which you progress through a sequence of challenge areas to reach the door on the other side.