Alright point taken, but the question is whether the Schrödinger equation is describing the real state of the particle before it's measured, or it just has predictive power as a useful tool, and the reality is something else. Afterall, what the hell is a probability wave supposed to be? — Marchesk
In context of Binney and HMI, if the reality would be our epistemic uncertainty about the complex state of the measuring device having a large influence on the particle it's detecting. — Marchesk
If MWI is the case, then probability wave is a description of other worlds. Or it could be pilot waves guiding the particle. But then again, perhaps reality is a jumble of possibilities when we're not looking? Question is why does measurement make it classical? Why is our lived experience mostly classical? — Marchesk
If MWI is the case, then probability wave is a description of other worlds. Or it could be pilot waves guiding the particle. But then again, perhaps reality is a jumble of possibilities when we're not looking? Question is why does measurement make it classical? Why is our lived experience mostly classical? — Marchesk
The experiments are primary, not the math. Math is used to model and predict experimental results. Schrodinger's equation exists because of the double slit experiment and others like it.
So a natural question to ask is whether the math fully takes everything relevant into account. In this interpretation, the unknown quantum state of the measuring device is a potential source of something important not being taking into account. — Marchesk
1. To any possible state of a system (collection of particles) there corresponds a unique set of information about it, called a 'quantum state', which is uniquely represented by a mathematical object called a 'ket' which is part of a collection of such objects, called a 'Hilbert Space'. [Later on, this is generalised so that kets are replaced by operators, in order to allow for non-pure states, but we won't worry about that here] — andrewk
2. To every aspect of the system that can be measured as a number - called an 'observable' - there corresponds a unique mathematical object called a 'Hermitian operator' — andrewk
3. If a system is in state s, to which corresponds ket S, and a measurement is made of observable m, which corresponds to Hermitian operator M then, immediately after the measurement is made, the particle will be in a state s' whose associated ket has the mathematical property of 'being an eigenket of the Hermitian operator M', and the value observed from the measurement will be a number that is 'the eigenvalue of that eigenket'. Further, as assessed prior to the measurement, the probability of the state after the measurement having ket S' is proportional to the square of the 'inner product' (another maths term) of S with S'. — andrewk
4. The ket associated with a system evolves over time according to a known differential equation, called Schrodinger's Equation. — andrewk
The MWI proponent conceded to Binney that MWI would be totally unnecessary if the measuring device is the culprit, but doubted that having more exact knowledge of its quantum state would make the uncertainty disappear. — Marchesk
It is a common misconception that the 'state' of a system is a specification of the exact value of every observable of the system - location, momentum, spin, energy, etc. But the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle - which is core QM, not interpretation - tells us that for any pair of dual observables - of which position and momentum are the most commonly cited - a state that has a narrow range of possibilities for one of the observables must have a very wide range of possibilities for the other. This has nothing to do with the practical ability to make measurements and is instead based on what 'state' means in QM. It is a purely theoretical, mathematical result. To reject that result we would have to radically alter, or even jettison, QM, not just choose another interpretation. — andrewk
I don't think that was the case. He repeated himself a lot, and was rather adamant. He doesn't except certain postulates as being anything more than useful modelling tools. Also, becuase the other speaker conceded that MWI would be unnecessary if the measuring apparatus is the culprit of the wave function probability distribution. — Marchesk
You didn't address the point. Putting it another way - the evidence for 'other worlds' can only ever be indirect. — Wayfarer
Binney's view of the wavefunction is that it's a really useful and powerful tool, given our limited knowledge, but it has unreal properties, such as superposition. He thought the notion of a superposed cat to be absurd, like Schrodinger did. Basically, Binney thinks all the other interpretations of QM go wrong because they took the wave equation to be something more than a useful tool. — Marchesk
I'll restate it briefly. There wavefunction is not real. Rather, our uncertainty about the exact quantum state (which is classical in Binney's interpretation) is translated to the particle or particles in these experiments. If we could take into account the exact state of the measuring device, then the uncertainty of the particle's property in question would dissipate, and thus there would be no need for the wavefunction. — Marchesk
When you say 'MWI is a testable prediction', what you mean is that the results are compatible with the many worlds explanation; the results appear to support the idea that there are many worlds. But you can never actually detect 'the other worlds' directly, except by way of inference. Is that the case? — Wayfarer
Sure, what I mean is that it's a pretty big metaphysical bullet to bite. — Marchesk
That's the motivation for Many Worlds, btw. It removes the collapse issue, but at a cost of postulating a vast number of branching worlds that we can't interact with. But if you're willing to roll with that, it works. — Marchesk
There's also Pilot Wave theory which removes the non-determinism and collapse issue, but at the cost of non-locality. The theory is quite simple in that it supposes that each particle interacts with a guiding field. So, say, the particle always passes through one of the slits in the double slit experiment, but the wave passes through both and hence interferes with the particle's motion. — Agustino
Gravitons, I would presume. And space has quantum foam, where virtual particles pop in and out of existence, creating energy that supplies most of the mass for particles. — Marchesk
Yeah, but part of science is asking why phenomena appears the way it does. What's going on behind the scenes? Imagine if Newton and Einstein had stopped at an equation for gravity and told everyone to shut up about the reality behind the equation. — Marchesk
The related concern is why should Schrodinger's equation work at all? Just saying that it fits experimental data is no answer at all. I was watching a video last night where Brian Green brought in four people to discuss the various interpretations of QM. One of them summed up the measurement problem as asking the question: what sort of world do we live in to get the sort of results that the double slit experiment gives us? — Marchesk
There's an easy (yet correct) answer to this: no. Mathematics isn't the cause of anything. Mathematics is simply an invented language for thinking about relations abstractly. — Terrapin Station
1. What determines a measurement? Even molecules can exhibit the same behavior that electrons and photons do in the double-slit experiments. — Marchesk
2. How does a quantum property transition from possibility to a single value? This would be the issue of the so-called wave function collapse. — Marchesk
3. Why is the probability distribution wave-like? If it's not real, then how does the math work out? What makes the wavefunction descriptive? How are mere possibilities interfering, cohering, entangling, etc? — Marchesk
4. Do normal, macro-scale objects exist when we're not "looking"? I recall reading that Bohr and Einstein debated whether the moon was still there when they turned their backs. Bohr, being the champion of the Copenhagen Interpretation, argued it was just a range of possible states. — Marchesk
5. Early enough in the universe, everything would have been on the scale of subatomic particles, so how did the macro-scale universe where measurements take place come to exist? If the Copenhagen interpretation is correct, then the early Big Bang was just a probability space, not something real. Does that mean a measurement took place? — Marchesk
6. Does gravity have a wavefunction? Is mass only discrete when measured? What would the implication of that be for GR? — Marchesk
If there are any normative moral relativists out there, I'd be fascinated to hear from them, since it seems to me that the putative worldview of this straw man category is self-contradicting. — andrewk
So a universal computer could compute the result of itself being sucked into a black hole and having contact with the interior (singularity or whatever lies there). — Marchesk
Although, this seems unfair. I'm guessing the idea of simulating precludes the thing doing the simulating, otherwise we have regress and self-referential issues. I might as well ask if the computer can simulate itself itself being introduced to a really strong magnet, or whatever would disrupt a QC. — Marchesk
I don't see how having a computer, quantum or otherwise, that can store enormous volumes of information helps in simulating the universe, if the computer is in the universe. Let the info storable by the computer be A and the info in the universe outside the computer be B. Then, as long as B is nonzero, for the computer to simulate the universe it has to store at least volume A+B which, no matter how mind-bogglingly large A is, will be more than the computer can store. — andrewk
Do you think that a few hundred qubits could completely simulate a black hole? And by that, I mean the object itself, not just the effect on things outside the event horizon. — Marchesk
Abstractions/concepts are particular, concrete phenomena in brains. Mentality is simply specific dynamic brain states. — Terrapin Station
If such prediction is impossible however, than I would say let's live in the illusion of a non-deterministic world, regardless of wether we do or not. — John Frostell
How would the computer computer the future of the universe without being the entire universe? And if the entire universe isn't computing ahead such that we know the future, then you can't have a computer inside the universe doing so. — Marchesk
Why, in your view, (a) would information theory be a waste of time, (b) would technology based on information theory not be possible, (c) would computation not exist, and (d) would virtual reality be impossible just in case concepts/abstractions are purely mental? — Terrapin Station
Abstractions, by the way, are strictly mental. Any properties abstractions have is simply properties of the concept we've formulated. — Terrapin Station
Not all mathematicians are platonists. At any rate, I'm definitely not a realist on mathematics. — Terrapin Station
That's not at all the case. I just don't think that they're something other than particulars. — Terrapin Station
When do you consider the theory of quantium entanglement to start--with the EPR paper? Schrodinger's response to it? — Terrapin Station
If I may interject, I find it hard to distinguish between "predictable regularities" and "real laws of nature." In other words, I don't see how "real laws of nature" explain rather than differently refer to the same predictable regularities. Do we not experience the order we find as a "brute fact"? — R-13
Right, but the question is how we can know that a counterfactual claim is true, if - as the nominalist asserts - there are no real laws of nature, just individual things and events. — aletheist
We have been testing counterfactuals for centuries - that is what experimentation is, and this is precisely what Peirce called "induction." It is not the same thing that Popper rejected, since both men affirmed that theories are never verified, only corroborated (or falsified). — aletheist
The true guarantee of the validity of induction is that it is a method of reaching conclusions which, if it be persisted in long enough, will assuredly correct any error concerning future experience into which it may temporarily lead us
It rather seems dubious to me that there are any scientific theories that are not arrived at via a combination of inductive, abdutive and deductive reasoning, with the first two being more prominent than the latter--after all, a deductively-arrived-at theory would at best only need experimentation to confirm its premises, otherwise it's not deductive at all. — Terrapin Station
but my question boils down to why induction is so successful as a mode of inference. — aletheist
I know that this is getting repetitive, but I still would like to know - on your view, what warrants our confident predictions that particulars will "behave" in the future as they have in the past? — aletheist
Are we ever justified in making law-like counterfactual claims about circumstances that may never actually occur? — aletheist