I was reading Sakurai's book and here is an extract:
In classical physics it is possible to keep track of individual particles even though they may look alike. When we have particle 1 and particle 2 considered as a system, we can, in principle, follow the trajectory of 1 and that of 2 separately at each instant of time. For bookkeeping purposes, you may color one of them blue and the other red and then examine how the red particle moves and how the blue particle moves as time passes. In quantum mechanics, however, identical particles are truly indistinguishable. This is because we cannot specify more than a complete set of commuting observables for each of the particles; in particular, we cannot label the particle by coloring it blue. Nor can we follow the trajectory because that would entail a position measurement at each instant of time, which necessarily disturbs the system; in particular, the two situations (a) and (b) shown in Figure 7.1 cannot be distinguished-not even in principle.
From this I understand two points (maybe not entirely independent of each other):
Since classically you can track the trajectory, in order to distinguish a particle from another you can just "follow" that particle. For instance, a particle formed at LHC can be followed and hence at any instant of time can be distinguished. This cannot be done quantum mechanically, so bye-bye to trying to distinguish by following its trajectory.
It is mentioned that a particle cannot be tagged "blue" or "red". What does this tagging exactly mean? Four quantum numbers specify an electron, does this tagging mean somehow introducing new such degrees?
To put my question in perspective, I think of something in these lines. Take two identical electrons, put them in separate 1D boxes. Pour "blue" stuff in the whole of 1 box. Pour "red" stuff in the other. Now take them out of these boxes. Will we not able to distinguish between them now? Of course, this would only make sense if we know what we mean by "coloring". So to sum up my question:
What would tagging of particles even mean? and if it has a sensible meaning what's wrong with my example? (This is probably related to "we cannot specify more than a complete set of commuting observables for each of the particles" but I do not understand this.)