I never said math was NOT mystical.  Who are you arguing with?
> Quantum mechanics looks mystical because it must be worked in highly 
> abstract math.
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Perhaps that is one reason, but there are lots of other situations 
which can only be approached using highly abstract math, which are not 
taken to be mystical.  Example: fluid mechanics - everybody is familiar 
with the 'meniscus', but it is staggeringly difficult to predict, since 
it requires the solution of an extremely complicated nonlinear partial 
differential equation: even more complicated than the Schrodinger 
equation as it looks in, say, Bell's Theorem.  But nobody says that 
fluid mechanics looks mystical, while people will say that Bell's 
Theorem requires a certain 'mystical' interpretation of quantum 
mechanics... that is due to that "conscious observation" makes, 
or seems to make, a difference in the outcome of events, which, I 
assert, is why quantum mechanics appears mystical.
-JPSchneider