Yes, it alludes to the self-referential problems associated with predicting what oneself is going to do in the future. Fortunately, you can usually just choose! — Andrew M
Yes. Whereas, in my view, potential just means that the value has not been actualized yet for the observer (which would require a local interaction).
It's like the problem of non-referring sentences. The sentence "The King of France is wise" has a potential use but not an actual use until the appropriate physical conditions occur (i.e., a King of France is installed). As a consequence, you have to be careful about the logic applied to such statements. — Andrew M
My own view is that there is a universal quantum state that is invariant, but RQM seems to reject that. Though perhaps another invariant is that we are all human beings with similar physical structures so we should always be able to agree that there are electrons and on the form of an electron. — Andrew M
Basically the same as you. I think almost all of these views can end up looking like Many Worlds when you dig into them. It makes sense in a way since they all depend on unitary QM. Though I think RQM would say that a history can be indefinite rather than there being multiple histories. — Andrew M
The article says that an external system can take this more 'full measurement' of some system, but not any system containing the system being measured. I don't understand this since Heisenberg's uncertainty says that even an external system can't do that. So they must mean something else when discussing the sort of information they expect from this 'self measurement'. — noAxioms
Dalla Chiara shows that the duality in the description of state evolution, encoded in the ordinary (i.e. von Neumann's) approach to the measurement problem, can be given a purely logical interpretation: “If the apparatus observer O is an object of the theory, then O cannot realize the reduction of the wave function. This is possible only to another O′, which is ‘external’ with respect to the universe of the theory. In other words, any apparatus, as a particular physical system, can be an object of the theory. Nevertheless, any apparatus which realizes the reduction of the wave function is necessarily only a metatheoretical object ” (Dalla Chiara 1977, p. 340).
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O cannot have a full description of the interaction of S with himself (O), because his information is correlation information and there is no meaning in being correlated with oneself. If we include the observer into the system, then the evolution is still unitary, but we are now dealing with the description of a different observer.
Under any 'consciousness causes collapse' or other anthropocentric take, the friend, being conscious, cannot be in superposition. In any other interpretation, the friend very much can be. — noAxioms
Just thought of this: Per time symmetry, is there such a thing as radioactive un-decay, and would such an event constitute an end to a causal chain? If not, I don't think the decay can constitute an uncaused event. — noAxioms
Bob's knowledge of the paper means nothing: The device may have randomly declined to take a measurement and emit a blank paper. Bob can tell if it happened by measuring superposition or not. So the device taking the measurement, and not Bob's knowledge of that action is what collapses the wave function. — noAxioms
For the alien not to measure the moon, he'd have to put the moon (and everything else) in Schrodinger's box, which is best achieved by making a ship that is one, inside out. Zero information can penetrate from outside to inside the box. He opens the box randomly at some location which happens to be here, and there is some vast wave function of what he might find here that collapses quite improbably to us and our moon. Far more likely it collapses to empty space. Depend on from what distance he came, but it would have to be from over 5 billion light years away because the moon (or the whole solar system) needs to be unmeasured from the start. He'd have to come from a helluva longer distance to find no galaxy here. How far must I travel now to find a place where I have zero information about what is there? A lot further than the event horizon. It cannot be done. We see stuff that is 22 BLY away, which is not possible to reach ever. But the moon is young enough that it can be done. — noAxioms
Before that there is no moon to be nonexistent. He can equally declare torrid-planet Vulcan to not exist. In both cases, he's just making stuff up. — noAxioms
I have a hard time figuring out what Bitbol finds special about us. I am special to me, but everything has a relationship like that with itself. Another human ('us' but not 'me') measuring something gives me no more or less knowledge of that measurement than a dot on an unseen paper, and the wave function collapses either way. Wigner's friend just doesn't change that, so there is no 'us', just 'me', which is solipsism if you posit any QM significance to that.
Sorry. You can see I have little patience for anthropocentrism. I'm biased all to hell. — noAxioms
I was going to make Rovelli's point. If something changes state at all, it stores that information in its changed state. A prism is an example of something that sort of interacts with a photon without a state change (storage of the information). The photon is absorbed and immediately a new one is emitted in the same direction, leaving no state change to the prism and a change to the photon for the tiny delay in its journey. The prism does not store the information, and thus does not collapse the wave function of the photon. Objects that do change state don't seem to need to perform an act of registration to be affected like that, so that wording is still a bit unclear to me. — noAxioms
I don't follow. The perspective of the pen seems the same as that of a human being there. The pen just pays a lot less attention. I honestly give humans or any living thing no special regard in this topic. — noAxioms
Cool. Few agree with that. It is controversial. — noAxioms
Kind of hard not to observe an electron. Its state might be hidden if put in a box, but we put it there so we know its there. If not in the box, it interacts with other things and that makes it exist. I cannot escape that interaction. — noAxioms
An unobserved system is in superposition of possible states that follow from the last observed state of the system. The real trick is how to go about not observing it for any length of time. Hence our alien showing up in an inside-out Schrodinger's space ship. — noAxioms
Suppose you wanted to measure the diameter of a pizza. The way to do that is to put the pizza in front of you and hold a tape measure up to it, but the act of putting the pizza in front of you already performed the pizza/not-pizza measurement. I could in theory walk into a dark room, hold out the tape, have the lights turned on and hope by improbable chance that a pizza appears directly under that tape, but that is not likely to happen if I had zero knowledge of the presence of a pizza in that dark room.
So the electron is like that. Maybe I shot it and want to measure where it goes, or any other property of it, but to do that, I'm not taking a measurement of a random volume of space and hoping an electron appears in it. I probably already have a specific one in mind, meaning the measurement of its mere existence has already been done. — noAxioms
I have more of a problem with MWI having a real wave function because it makes for a weighted reality of each of the worlds. One world seems to exist more than the other, but existence seems not to be anything but a True/False state. How cat X exist twice as hard as Y? So maybe CH resolves that problem for me. — noAxioms
I don't see why it needs to posit indeterminism or not. — noAxioms
Equally weighted then, but why do we find ourselves in a world where far more 'likely' collapses occur than the 'unlikely' ones? If all results are equally real, why are the probabilities of measuring those results unequal? — noAxioms
Sounds like RQM. My history is real to me. My future is not, thus 'I' am defined as this endpoint event along with its history, plus an arbitrary designation of which events are 'me' and which ones are 'other stuff'. There's nothing in physics to make that designation.
Information preservation seems to prevent multiple histories from culminating in the same state — noAxioms
From some (most) perspectives, there is no 'it' to be an electron. To consider an electron is to have already assumed a perspective where it exists. It is a measurement already taken. — noAxioms
Hard to understand is my current state of affairs. I don't get a clear statement about how it differs from the others. — noAxioms
The man on the street, sure, but to philosophers and physicists who know their QM, that faith in there being an actual state of affairs is not very deeply rooted at all. Those roots were discarded a century ago. There are interpretations that support it and interpretations that do not. That this interpretation lists itself among the latter is hardly contrary to established belief. Yes, it seems a lot like MWI and I'd like to see a thing that spells out where the two differ in metaphysics, and not just terminology. — noAxioms
From a quick glance at the wiki chart, both have universal wave function, but only MWI considers that wave function to be real. MWI is deterministic and CHI is not, but it isn't clear from the linked article why not. — noAxioms
I have a problem with worlds of non-equal weights in MWI, and I'm not sure if the interpretation addresses that, or if CHI has a similar problem. — noAxioms
In which case, how does this address the 'observer problem'? The observer might occupy a particular reference frame, but without an observer, then what is being measured/observed? I guess I will have to find time to go back and look at those resources that boundless provided in more detail. — Wayfarer
None of this means I cannot collapse my own state in sufficient hindsight, which is sort of what I meant with my first reply to this issue. — noAxioms
I have a hard time keeping up with you guys :) — noAxioms
This isn't the QM I know. There is no 'big difference' between the two cases. The cat is both dead and alive (superposition), not either dead or alive (result of an unobserved coin toss). The latter probability function is said expression of ignorace about how the coin toss turned out, but the probability function of the cat is not ignorance. It really is dead and alive until measured, else it could not interfere with itself. — noAxioms
Maybe the colleague (Wigner's friend) changed that (being a conscious being that the cat apparently isn't), and that explains this assertion above. This I suppose cannot be disproved since there is no way to prevent the decoherence of something as classic as a human, but it also goes for the cat of course. They seem to allow the inconsistency of having a cat in superposition but not a lab assistant. — noAxioms
What does the measurement chain have to do with it? I shoot a photon through the slits and it makes a mark on the screen. That's a measurement even though it might be a minute before the operator bothers to look and learn of the result. The result is not being kept hidden in a box to prevent decoherence. If consciousness causes collapse, it doesn't imply that knowledge causes it. The conscious guy is in the room, ignorant of the result of the measurement, but nevertheless present. The collapse occurs because of that presence, no? If it is awareness, then I should be able to measure a thing but not take note of the result, and find the thing still in superposition later on. But that doesn't happen. It seems a falsification for the 'conscious knowledge' causing collapse idea. — noAxioms
So what? Only the table lamp is the privileged object for the table lamp. We are no more a natural end to the chain of reactions than is the table lamp. The reactions continue right on through us to affect other things. I have a hard time thinking of any causal chain that is initiated (rather than propagated) and cannot think of any that can end ever (per conservation of information). Radioactive decay might be an example of a new causal chain. Depends on interpretation. — noAxioms
Without a description of what constitutes that registration act then, I have no idea what he's talking about. — noAxioms
If CI is taken as an epistemological interpretation, I suppose this is true in a way, but it seems trivial to falsify. Alice (a simple device) measures the spin on one of an entangled pair, and prints the result of that measurement on a little paper that ejects face down on the table. Human Bob sees the paper but has gained no knowledge of the result, only knowledge that the measurement has taken place. He now measures the other particle of that pair and is is no longer in superposition. His lack of knowledge did not prevent the collapse of the wave function of his sample The device (Alice) has no knowledge since it retains no state of the incident after finishing its little printout. Does the unseen paper have the knowledge? It certainly contains the (hidden) information, but does it have 'knowledge'? If it does, why that anthropocentric choice of words? — noAxioms
Well, so do I, but my definition might be different than yours, so it isn't saying much. I will to be on the other side of these jail bars, so physics, deterministic or otherwise, very much does get in my way on that account, but few consider such restriction to be an example of lack of free will.
[But I am a bit unwilling to explain why I think so here... :smile:.]Agree, this would be too far off topic. There are always other threads about such things. — noAxioms
Ok...Yes, I agree that inter-subjectivity and objectivity in the usual sense are different. What moral relativism denies, however, is that there are no universal ethical truths. — boundless
Double negative. It denies that there are universal ethical truths. I'm sure you meant that. — noAxioms
Actually, I find that any particular rule is probably meaningless for most situations. 'Torture of babies is bad' has no application to the vast majority of things where 'torture' and 'babies' are both meaningless or at least poorly defined. Note my use of 'things' instead of the already restrictive word 'everybody' which detracts from the universality of the rule. A universal rule should not only apply to things that are member of 'everybody'. — noAxioms
Same here. I don't necessarily deny objective morality, just playing devil's advocate. — noAxioms
Don't understand your, um, misunderstanding. How can it exist unmeasured? I've not measured the 2nd even larger moon, so it doesn't exist, and that seems not a problem to you. Nobody can be on this Earth (can exist relative to me say) and not have measured the moon. We have an inter-subjective agreement about that. Similarly, if one has not measured the moon (or has measured that bigger one), then that person cannot establish any inter-subjective relationship with me. It would be a contradiction. — noAxioms
The article says a complete measurement of ones self cannot be taken, not that you can't measure yourself. My pants size is a measurement of myself. :sad: — noAxioms
I don't have a definition of S. It seems arbitrary. It is fairly easy to do for a human, but less so for other things. The ease of defining human X (and equating that definition to the same X at some other time) allows the existence of a legal identity of X. You can't do that with amoebas and flames. — noAxioms
I think there are interactions between two electrons (like both being part of the same Helium) that ambiguates which one is which when one of the two changes state (like exits the atom). So yes, an electron departed, but it wasn't necessarily a particular electron. This is not a measurement thing. Of course there is no way to measure which one stayed and which one left. I'm just saying that metaphysically, it seems that electrons don't have identities, and thus act like a distinct 'system S'. — noAxioms
Not sure if we're talking about the same thing here. Most of my relation with the electron is 'it is there', and relative to some other observer, it isn't there, or anywhere, just like the moon. To any two intersubective observers, they should agree on the electron being there or not, even if viewed from different frames. Isn't 'it is there' an invariant between said intersubjective perspectives? One says it is northbound and the other says eastbound, but both say it is there. That relation is not invariant between perspectives that are not intersubjective. — noAxioms
We should if it is sentient. I just want to talk to an alien that reproduces by suddenly falling into two halves. There is so much stuff that we find intuitive only because we don't do that, and talking to such a being would drive out all those inbred biases in not just us, but the amoeba as well. It would learn from us. The flame is even worse, because two flames can merge into one. Even the amoeba can't do that. We may well be able to talk to the flame some day soon because any AI entity (say an intelligent virtual being) would benefit from working that way — noAxioms
Appreciate the good discussion. Been a while for me. — noAxioms
In a probabilistic theory the limiting cases of a probability equal to 1 or 0 are equivalent to asserting that the corresponding proposition (e.g., “the system has property P”) is, respectively, true or false. In the histories approach probabilities are linked to frameworks, and for this reason the notions of “true” and “false” are also framework dependent. This cannot lead to inconsistencies, a proposition being both true and false, because of the single framework rule. But it is contrary to a deeply rooted faith or intuition, shared by philosophers, physicists, and the proverbial man in the street, that at any point in time there is one and only one state of the universe which is “true”, and with which every true statement about the world must be consistent. In Sec. 27.3 of Griffiths (2002a) this belief is referred to as unicity, and it is what must be abandoned if the histories interpretation of quantum theory is on the right track.
Yes, it seems she is simply talking about a logical consequence there. If the cafe closes then no-one can eat there. But her characterizing a logical consequence as an instantaneous and acausal effect, or a form of global non-locality, is a category mistake. — Andrew M
Fair enough! As it happens, I also find Aristotle's form/matter distinction useful for considering information. A physical system, being substantial, can be abstracted in terms of its matter and form (or state). Which provides a natural isomorphism between a physical system and a point in state space. — Andrew M
Don't think there is such a cut with Wigner's interpretation. Consciousness causes collapse, period. If the cat is conscious, then it can't be in superposition of dead/alive. If not, then it can. There is no way to disprove this since there is no way to isolate a human in Schrodinger's box except by distance. I cannot take a human Alice and measure superposition on her. In principle I can, but there is just no practical way to prevent decoherence of a human. Alice is just not going to interfere with herself, even though I thought of a way for her to do it. — noAxioms
Now, what happens if WE open the door of the lab. to see what happened in it? As previously, we see a well-defined chain of characters on the screen of the computer, we see that the cat is either dead or alive, and we hear a colleague saying that he had already seen (well before our arrival) what we are now discovering. And as previously, we must modify suddenly our tool of probabilistic prediction in order to account for our certainty of finding everything in the same configuration, if we come back in the lab. some time later. In the same way as we had to reduce the probability function of the whole measurement chain, we now have to reduce its wave function. There is a big difference between the two cases, however: whereas the ordinary probability functions could be considered as the expression of our ignorance about what effectively occurred in the lab., this is not true for the wave functions of quantum mechanics. The wave function of the measurement chain just provides a probabilistic prediction of the result of a possible (uncontrollable) interaction between it and something else. And this manifests itself through the persistent presence of a term W (for “wavering” or “wavelike effects”), in the probabilities calculated from the wave function.
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Let me show how this indexical “solution” (or “dissolution”) of the measurement problem of quantum mechanics works. It is based on the far-reaching, and already documented, difference between a property and an observable. A property of an object is defined in the absolute, whereas an observable refers to a possible relation between the object and something else. Each time one wishes to make the relation explicit, one has to introduce the “something else” into the field of description. But then, the characterization of this something else is itself relative to a possible interaction with a third element, and so on and so forth. Isn't there a natural end to this chain of relations? Yes, there is. WE are this end. Of course, I am not trying to say that WE are unique or privileged beings in nature (this would be collective solipsism of an absurd sort), but only that WE are privileged beings for US! As soon as we establish a relation with an element of the measurement chain, this element acquires a determination relative to US. Nothing has thus to be changed in the physical description, since determinations of the measurement chain are still relative to something. But everything is different for US, since the determinations of the measurement chain are now relative to US. And a relation of which WE are one term is something quite peculiar, even if it is only peculiar ... from OUR point of view.
This is not to deny that quantum mechanics, as one of the most accomplished realizations of the ideal of universal description pursued by the natural sciences, could indeed describe any phenomena.
Yet, in doing so, it could not avoid leaving the preconditions for description outside its scope. As a well-known article about the measurement problem of quantum mechanics puts it: the quantum theory can describe anything, but not everything [Peres1982][Fuchs2000].
Does CI explicitly define measurement far enough to classify it in general as a 'registered device'? I thought it left measurement fairly undefined, allowing all sorts of interpretations on the spectrum from interaction through information processing and full on has-a-soul. — noAxioms
Yes, that's the full-on definition. It is outside methodological naturalism, but not outside science. Wigner concluded that the interpretation led to solipsism partly because other consciousnesses will collapse waves functions differently, and that puts each of these consciousnesses in different physical worlds. If that's not the view, then you don't exist until I collapse you, and that again makes for solipsism. — noAxioms
Not really. I don't formally know what Wheeler means by 'registration'. I tried to look it up but found the term only fairly well buried in papers beyond my ability to absorb. I used the word above, but only to echo the notion of a system that meets some unstated qualification of processing the information of measurement. — noAxioms
Or a Kantian-like interpretation like the one proposed by Bitbol and others (and possibly of Bohr at least for some parts of his life, if Bitbol is right...) if you do not like the idea that consciousness really 'modifies' reality (but it is nevertheless necessary to have an 'observer'). — boundless
What I like has little to do with it. I'm interested in what works: is self consistent. — noAxioms
Well it works I suppose. If consciousness is not a classical physical thing, then there's no chicken/egg problem. Still, how does it manage to collapse a state of total superposition into a state with matter present, let alone matter that can host consciousness? Collapse seems not to be in any way a function of will. I cannot will a measurement of vertical polarization, yet I would seem to need to do that to find my physical host. — noAxioms
Oh good, then you might take a stab at my questions, even though they're geared towards a Wigner sort of setup. Are you saying that consciousness is not physical? — noAxioms
If there's not another topic to discuss it, then why not here? I'm in no way against inter-subjective agreements. I just don't think that makes things objective. We both see the same moon, sort of, but the moon's existence is still relative. It totally doesn't exist to something that has taken no measurement of it, but it also doesn't stop existing to us if everybody looks away for a moment. It cannot be un-measured. — noAxioms
S always exists to itself it would seem. The live cat measures a live cat, never the dead one, let alone no-cat. I don't see how that is problematic. — noAxioms
Since I am not really an event, I'm also not a defined measured state S. Relative to parts of me, other parts are in superposition. This does not in any way impede my classic functionality, but it does mean that lacking a defined state, I lack a defined state and thus a defined identity, which was never a problem to my view, so I don't care. But one has to be careful when trying to pinpoint an intersubjectivity between two systems. So each of us measures a past state of the other, not a current one. These are nitpicks since the parts in superposition are trivial differences. — noAxioms
You need to define S. This collection of atoms currently has an arbitrary box drawn around them and is designated as S or 'noAxioms' for the moment, even though many of those atoms come and go continuously. You may have a different idea if you have a different philosophy of mind and identity. For me, at best, my identity is the stuff in that abstract box drawn around a bunch of matter near a certain event, and the entire worldline that led to that event. That definition only works because I cannot subjectively split or merge. It wouldn't work for an amoeba, starfish, or a candle flame. — noAxioms
I would love to talk philosophy with a sentient amoeba. — noAxioms
Maybe it isn't consistent. Hence the appreciated cage rattling. — noAxioms
Actually I read your account of Rovelli's 'observer' again, and there's something about it I can't buy. It says "I use the word “observer” in the sense in which it is conventionally used in Galilean relativity when we say that an object has a velocity “with respect to a certain observer”. The observer can be any physical object having a definite state of motion'. — Wayfarer
I’ll spell out my bottom line - that all measurement or observation has a subjective aspect, i.e. it is undertaken by a subject, and the subject is (obviously) never disclosed in the act of observation, because observation is always of objects or at least of the objective domain. As Bitbol says, the inability to recognise the ubiquitous presence of the subject is precisely the blind spot of modern science. Philosophers (including Kant and Schopenhauer) understand this but many scientists do not, because it’s not, by definition, a scientific issue. But the fact that it becomes a subject of discussion here is because scientists are perhaps operating at ‘the limit of objectivity’. — Wayfarer
With this I agree. I often characterize it the way Bohr did: as a description of what can be known, and not at all a description of what is. It is rather a jumping board by which a description of what is might be bounded. Others take their interpretation of what is and label it Copenhagen because it fits within these bounds. — noAxioms
But where is the ambiguity? The problem is that the formalism of the theory alone does not identify what is the 'observer'. Yet, in order to explain the wave-function collapse you need to posit an 'observer'. If not, we cannot explain why our 'everyday world' looks classical, so to speak. — boundless
I thought the difference between the various interpretations often focuses on the treatment of the Heisenburg Cut. The Wigner's friend scenario basically puts one observer on either side of that cut, and drives out many of the differences between the interpretations. — noAxioms
Firstly, one might try to say that, indeed, there are physical objects that count as 'observers'. For instance, objects that are able to store and process 'information', like e.g. computers, registering devices, brains etc. If I am not mistaken this is the view of Wheeler. The 'universe' is 'participatory' in this view because each of these 'observers' can 'modify' reality by 'collapsing' the wave-function. — boundless
Isn't there a problem with this view in that without earlier collapse, none of these registered devices could possibly exist in the first place? If understanding of a measurement is what causes the collapse, how could the thing doing the understanding come about to do it? A chicken/egg problem. — noAxioms
Secondly, another possible way to deal with this is to go with RQM (Relational Quantum Mechanics) as Rovelli et al do. Here, all physical systems can be 'observers' and the 'measurement' is simply a physical interaction. — boundless
That definition of 'measurement' is hardly confined in RQM. — noAxioms
OK, that is a point about CI. To know something about system X, I must exist, and I am classical, thus something needs to exist in a classic sense. MWI falls under CI then? — noAxioms
Or one might argue that, for instance, you cannot have a well-defined concept of information without relating it to some form of consciousness (not necessarily human, in fact). And you end up with the 'Consciousness causes collapse' interpretation — boundless
The Wigner interpretation I referenced. — noAxioms
Or a Kantian-like interpretation like the one proposed by Bitbol and others (and possibly of Bohr at least for some parts of his life, if Bitbol is right...) if you do not like the idea that consciousness really 'modifies' reality (but it is nevertheless necessary to have an 'observer'). — boundless
How does this interpretation get around the chicken/egg problem if an observer is necessary for an observer to collapse out of a system? I presume Bitbol does not consider a dust mote to be an observer? — noAxioms
Anyway, I am not noAxioms, but I believe that his point was not 'nihilistic'. — boundless
My post above sort of indicates that while I don't mean to be nihilistic, I'm not sure the view doesn't lead necessarily to that camp. — noAxioms
It is meaningful to say that there are individual systems like S? That sounds an awful lot like counterfactual definiteness. A system with states still in complete superposition is still an existing system. There was no description of S existing in relation to R. Just 'there is a system S', which sounds more like MWI and not RQM. — noAxioms
S does have intrinsic properties. I'm just balking at the suggestion that there is S, unqualified. — noAxioms
? I would say we can only speak of objects. There is no 'no thing' view. That would be the objective view, things that exist without the relation, or with only an objective relation. — noAxioms
Or one might argue that, for instance, you cannot have a well-defined concept of information without relating it to some form of consciousness (not necessarily human, in fact). — boundless
Thanks for the links! I had a quick skim. I find Rovelli's approach more natural than either of those. Bitbol's approach seems overly metaphysical and Kastner's approach is non-local. — Andrew M
As one of us (SK) has observed (Kauffman 2016, Chapter 7), we might plan to meet tomorrow for coffee at the Downtown Coffee Shop. But suppose that, unbeknownst to us, while we are making these plans, the coffee shop (actually) closes. Instantaneously and acausally, it is no longer possible for us (or for anyone no matter where they happen to live) to have coffee at the Downtown Coffee Shop tomorrow. What is possible has been globally and acausally altered by a new actual (token of res extensa).6 In order for this to occur, no relativity-violating signal had to be sent; no physical law had to be violated. We simply allow that actual events can instantaneously and acausally affect what is next possible (given certain logical presuppositions, to be discussed presently) which, in turn, influences what can next become actual, and so on. In this way, there is an acausal ‘gap’ between res extensa and res potentia in their mutual interplay, that corresponds to a form of global nonlocality.
[Footnote 6]: While ‘acausal’ in the classical sense of efficient causality (wherein one actual state causally influences another actual state), in the quantum mechanical sense of causality wherein potentia are treated as ontologically significant, the actualized state is understood to ‘causally’ alter the probability distribution by which the next ‘possible’ state is defined. For further discussion of this distinction between classical efficient causality and quantum mechanical causality, see Epperson (2004, 92-93; 2013, 105-6). On the other hand, under certain circumstances and at the relativistic level, where decay probabilities are taken into account, the relation between an actualized state and the next QP state may itself be indeterministic (see, e.g. Kastner 2012, Section 3.4 and Chapter6).
First, as with Rovelli, I think that quantum mechanics is local. Second, as with Aristotle, potentialities don't "do" anything, only actual systems do. — Andrew M
Instead, the term "potential" provides a natural way for Wigner and his friend to describe the scenario from their own perspective and also to describe the scenario from the other's perspective.
So when the friend (Alice) measures spin up, that actualizes (i.e., realizes) the particle's spin potential for her. But she also knows that both the spin and her subsequent measurement of the spin are only potentials for Wigner until Wigner measures the friend's system in that basis.
The actual/potential terminology combined with RQM's relationalism provides an ordinary language abstraction over the underlying mechanics. That abstraction preserves locality, factual definiteness, freedom of choice and, crucially, a referent within the universe that provides a view from somewhere (i.e., the system's reference frame). — Andrew M
(Source: https://arxiv.org/pdf/quant-ph/9609002.pdf ; emphasis mine)In order to prevent the reader from channeling his/her thoughts in the wrong direction, let me anticipate a few terminological remarks. By using the word “observer” I do not make any reference to conscious, animate, or computing, or in any other manner special, system. I use the word “observer” in the sense in which it is con- ventionally used in Galilean relativity when we say that an object has a velocity “with respect to a certain ob- server”. The observer can be any physical object having a definite state of motion. For instance, I say that my hand moves at a velocity v with respect to the lamp on my table. Velocity is a relational notion (in Galilean as well as in special relativistic physics), and thus it is al- ways (explicitly or implicitly) referred to something; it is traditional to denote this something as the observer, but it is important in the following discussion to keep in mind that the observer can be a table lamp. Also, I use information theory in its information-theory mean- ing (Shannon): information is a measure of the number of states in which a system can be –or in which several systems whose states are physically constrained (corre- lated) can be. Thus, a pen on my table has information because it points in this or that direction. We do not need a human being, a cat, or a computer, to make use of this notion of information.
It seems not to be. It would probably violate SR if it was. — noAxioms
Doing these sorts of measurements is how they determined the acceleration of expansion in the first place. You can't measure what is now, but you can measure how it appears now. — noAxioms
All of relativity seems to depend on locality, while QM interpretations might have other ideas. It is why I resist interpretations that discard locality in favor of counterfactual definiteness. I just don't see how relativity can make sense without locality. One can blatantly change the past, not just events outside one's future light cone.
That and the fact that counterfactual definiteness has all sorts of seemingly paradoxical philosophical baggage that goes away if you don't accept the principle. — noAxioms
Don't get your Dutch names wrong... I've got one myself. — noAxioms
The Andromeda thing and the Rietdijk-Putnam thing are pretty much the same, and are only paradoxical if you try to combine assumptions from both interpretations of time. All that proves is that they are not both correct. — noAxioms
Presentism demands an objective ordering of events (although no particular one), but a preferred folation does not demand a preferred moment in time. — noAxioms
Way to kill an afternoon, eh? — noAxioms
Thank you for the link. — noAxioms
Not sure how much I'm interested in sinking an interpretation that I've already listed as low probability. I'd rather see them sink RQM. Always best to have ones own cage rattled once in a while. — noAxioms
So we can see Rovelli's reasoning in the above exchange. For Alice on Andromeda, Carlo on Earth only potentially exists until a local interaction (say, a telescopic observation at light speed) brings him into her present (and then past). Similarly, for Bob the superintelligent being in the future, Carlo is only potentially at the conference until a local interaction decoheres the superposition (say, Bob talks to Carlo). — Andrew M
A further thought here is that I think this allows a representational interpretation of the wave function for RQM in terms of what is actual and potential for any given observer. What is locally entangled with an observer is actual (the past and present, measurements and interactions), what is not is potential (the future, spacelike separated regions, superpositions). — Andrew M
There may indeed be “peaceful coexistence” between Quantum nonlocality and Relativistic locality, but it may have less to do with signaling than with the ontology of the quantum state. Heisenberg's view of the mode of reality of the quantum state was briefly mentioned in Section 2 — that it is potentiality as contrasted with actuality. This distinction is successful in making a number of features of quantum mechanics intuitively plausible — indefiniteness of properties, complementarity, indeterminacy of measurement outcomes, and objective probability. But now something can be added, at least as a conjecture: that the domain governed by Relativistic locality is the domain of actuality, while potentialities have careers in space-time (if that word is appropriate) which modify and even violate the restrictions that space-time structure imposes upon actual events. The peculiar kind of causality exhibited when measurements at stations with space-like separation are correlated is a symptom of the slipperiness of the space-time behavior of potentialities. This is the point of view tentatively espoused by the present writer, but admittedly without full understanding. What is crucially missing is a rational account of the relation between potentialities and actualities — just how the wave function probabilistically controls the occurrence of outcomes. In other words, a real understanding of the position tentatively espoused depends upon a solution to another great problem in the foundations of quantum mechanics − the problem of reduction of the wave packet.
The expansion of space is uniform only under one foliation. It isn't absolutely uniform since it seems resistant to local mass, but only under one foliation does the expansion switch to accelerating everywhere at once. Essentially, only the the frame that corresponds locally to that foliation has the property of isotropy both in what is and in appearance. — noAxioms
AFAIK, there are attempts to reconcile dBB and SR that use a preferred foliation (which is not prohibited by Lorentz symmetry) but I think that this does not satisfy many people because it goes against the 'spirit' of Relativity. — boundless
It apparently goes against the spirit of SR, and it pained Einstein to not keep that in GR. Physics is different in other frames since non-local observations are allowed in GR. — noAxioms
Of course. One objectively orders any pair of events, and other may or may not attach an ontological status to each event (has or has not yet happened). A preferred foliation has no such ontological status. There is still spacetime with all events having equal ontology. Presentism has no spacetime, only space, with only current events existing (happening) and not any of the others. That sounds like a huge difference of reality to me. — noAxioms
I'd agree with the objection you are making. But IMO what you are saying is also a clue that one cannot make an absolute simultaneity (or rather, it is possible but would be 'hidden'...). — boundless
No, there would still be an absolute simultaneity... — noAxioms
You might be interested in the following article that addresses this issue:
But it didn't take physicists long to realise that while the Wheeler-DeWitt equation solved one significant problem, it introduced another. The new problem was that time played no role in this equation. In effect, it says that nothing ever happens in the universe, a prediction that is clearly at odds with the observational evidence.
— Quantum Experiment Shows How Time ‘Emerges’ from Entanglement — Andrew M
Nice find with the PF article and I fully agree with it. I was going to mention the Andromeda paradox and the idea of potentiality in relation to it in my previous post. So we seem to thinking along similar lines here. — Andrew M
It also reminds me of Aristotle's future sea battle example where he contrasts potential and actual: — Andrew M
Yes, I agree - it's just what quantum mechanics predicts will happen and so it's not contradictory (or unexpected) at all. But it does challenge objective collapse theories since they modify the standard formulation. — Andrew M
Not defining something undetectable (in SR) is fine, and I suppose the standard presentation of SR is that there isn't one. But GR, to the embarrassment of Einstein, had to admit to an apparent preferred foliation (which is not an inertial frame), so SR would actually be sort of wrong if it asserted that no preferred local frame can exist, and SR has never been shown to be wrong. — noAxioms
A preferred foliation is one thing. A preferred moment (presentism) is more of an offense to relativity — noAxioms
If presentism is true, what is the rate of advancement of objective time? Equivalently, by how much is say a clock that tracks GMT dilated? It isn't moving very fast, but it's the depth of the gravity well I'm interested in. I thought of this when I tried to look it up. The absolutists sort of group together like the flood geologists and put out all this propaganda against Einstein, but none of those denial sites quote this absolute dilation factor, which you think would be one of their flagship points like the absolute frame. But they evade the topic. Why is that? Must be embarrasing... — noAxioms
The one from GR is not enough? — noAxioms
Yes, I know about the superdeterminism loophole. I also dismiss it enough to state that Bell eliminated locality and counterfactual definiteness from both being true. I see none of the listed interpretations hold both to be true, utilizing the superdeterminism loophole, so it seems the world agrees with that assessment. — noAxioms
A 'strong correlationist' might say that it appears that ionic bonding would exist before the advent of sentient beings. I believe that Schopenhauer is a 'stronger correlationist' than Kant, because he says explicitly that you cannot even think about the universe where no sentient being exist and the previous story of the universe is actually related to the opening of the 'first eye' (i.e. the appearance of the first conscious being) and he also believed that the 'thing in itself' was singular. — boundless
Don't know what simultaneity has to do with it. Relativity seems to work fine with a defined preferred present, even if there is no way to determine it in SR. I suppose that with spooky action at a distance, a preferred foliation would unambiguously label one event as the cause and the other as an effect, but as the experiment that Wayfarer linked shows, there is no spooky action. The distant person (Alice) can make the measurement and Bob (local) know it because it was a scheduled thing. And yet Bod can measure his half of the pair and verify it is still in superposition. QM demands this, so it is not an interpretation.thing . The OP sort of disproves and spooky action at a distance. Alice knows that Bob will take a measurement in one second, and knows the result she will learn tomorrow when Bob reports it, and yet Bob verifies continued superposition, and then an hour later he actually measures the polarity. The superposition doesn't go away due to Alice's action. Therefore there is no spooky action at a distance. No? — noAxioms
The table says it denies locality. OK, I see the note [15] which seems to claim a sort of loophole in Bell inequality. I do suppose that relativity has an implication of locality since without it, events with cause/effect relationship are ambiguously ordered. Not sure if relativity theory forbids that explicitly. A nice unified theory would be nice. The sort of 'weak' non-locality required by dBB interpretation claims to be Lorentz invariant, so that means causes and effects are unambiguously ordered, no? Not an expert, but if Alice and Bob both measure their entangled polarities fairly 'simultaneously', it seems the order of events is hardly Lorentz invariant. So maybe I just don't understand that note. — noAxioms
Thanks - that would be my reading as well. — Andrew M
As I see it, the decompositions that are of interest are those that are robust to interactions with the environment. So the ordinary objects of our experience, by virtue of being persistent and observable, are robust. That physical structure has emerged through an evolutionary process (as underpinned by decoherence), it's not a priori.
In other words, as you say above and Rovelli mentions in his talk, we start from the structure that we observe in our experience and work from there. It's not a Platonic endeavor. Now RQM is not solipsistic. It generalizes from individuals, to humans, to things, and ultimately to all systems and composites of systems that can interact. I think that MWI just takes that one step further and sees the universe itself as a system with a reference frame and a quantum state that can be described. So you don't need an excursion through arbitrary decompositions to take that final step. — Andrew M
But on the idea that nothing happens in the Everettian universe, I think that is true in one sense. If one person is pulling on a rope from one end and someone else is pulling with equal force from the other end then there is a high-level abstract sense in which nothing is happening. But there's obviously a lot going on at lower levels. If the universe is itself in superposition then, similarly, in that frame of reference, nothing is happening - there's no time, no dynamics, etc. But it doesn't follow that under the hood, in the reference frames of subsystems, that nothing is happening. — Andrew M
Maybe a related idea here is to regard values in non-interacting systems in terms of potential. So, for Wigner, interference indicates that the friend has made an actual measurement in their reference frame but the measurement only has a potential value for Wigner until an interaction actualizes it for him (in accordance with the principle of locality).
That is distinct from a hidden variable theory that supposes that the friend has made an actual measurement that is merely unknown to Wigner, with the Bell inequality issues that that would entail. — Andrew M
Speaking Wheeler, it's always fun to remember his unequivocal stance for all those who like to misinterpret him on this point, that: "Consciousness' has nothing whatsoever to do with the quantum process" (Wheeler, “Law Without Law”). — StreetlightX
We live in a "participatory universe," Wheeler suggested, which emerges from the interplay of consciousness and physical reality, the subjective and objective realms.
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The idea that mind is as fundamental as matter—which Wheeler's "participatory universe" notion implies--also flies in the face of everyday experience. Matter can clearly exist without mind, but where do we see mind existing without matter? Shoot a man through the heart, and his mind vanishes while his matter persists. As far as we know, information—embodied in things like poetry, hiphop music and cell-phone images from Libya--only exists here on Earth and nowhere else in the universe. Did the big bang bang if there was no one there to hear it? Well, here we are, so I guess it did (and saying that God was listening is cheating).
Part of me would love to believe that consciousness is not an accidental by-product of the physical realm but is in some sense the primary purpose of reality. Without us to ponder it, the universe makes no sense; worse, it's boring. But the hard-headed part of me sees ideas like the "it from bit" as the kind of fuzzy-headed, narcissistic mysticism that science is supposed to help us overcome.
Wheeler was one of the first prominent physicists to propose that reality might not be wholly physical; in some sense, our cosmos must be a “participatory” phenomenon requiring the act of observation--and thus consciousness itself. Wheeler also drew attention to intriguing links between physics and information theory, which was invented in 1948 by mathematician Claude Shannon. Just as physics builds on an elementary entity, the quantum, defined by the act of observation, so does information theory. Its “quantum” is the binary unit, or bit, which is a message representing one of two choices: heads or tails, yes or no, zero or one.
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But Wheeler himself has suggested that there is nothing but smoke. “I do take 100 percent seriously the idea that the world is a figment of the imagination,” he remarked to physicist/science writer Jeremy Bernstein in 1985. Wheeler must know that this view defies common sense: Where was mind when the universe was born? And what sustained the universe for the billions of years before we came to be
Yes, the relationship between empirical exteriority and transcendental interiority is exactly what this kind of argument challenges. — fdrake
Ionic bonds happened before the advent of humans, yes or no? Ionic bonding would have occurred even if humans never existed, yes or no? — fdrake
Sounds like if H is also factorizable into H3 and H4 instead of just H1 and H2, H3 and H4 'exist' as much as the other two, and yet cannot exist in different worlds from H1 and H2, only in different worlds from each other. I think I got the gist of your explanation in your post, but it seems that RQM might suffer from some similar issues. — noAxioms
Now, I do not know if a version of this problem might appear in RQM (which AFAIK does not even use decoherence). The reason is that in MWI you regard the entire universe as the single 'real system' and you need to add an 'additional structure' in order to decompose the universe into subsystems. In RQM, the subsystems are the 'primary' because they are given by experience (in MWI, instead you try to derive experience from the universal wavefunction).
In other words, factorization is something that you do not need to justify simply because it is so to speak given by experience. (Also the comparison between RQM and Everett's theory in the SEP article about RQM might be interesting here...) — boundless
Thanks boundless - they're excellent videos and well worth watching for anyone with an interest in the philosophical aspects of QM. Fun quote from Rovelli at 36 mins: "When I told Max (Tegmark) that he was a relationist, he told me that he is going to convince me that I'm, without knowing, a Many World believer. — Andrew M
1. Is this just a semantic difference with Many Worlds? (That is, there are nonetheless many physical branches, but there are only deemed to be facts relative to an observer's branch.) — Andrew M
2. If not, then what is the substantial physical difference and what explains physical interference effects? (Many Worlds would explain it as physical interference between branches.) — Andrew M
The relevant question about our networks of inferential knowledge is whether they are vindicated solely by virtue of being intersubjectively validated or whether a knowledge claim's intersubjective validation tracks how nature behaves. Scientists don't produce theory or experiment, usually, for the purpose[ of intersubjective validation, they validate claims about the world using shared methodologies. Even repeating an experiment is done to assess whether a claim is true, consistent with the available evidence, or neither of these things. — fdrake
Even when all properties are relational, we can still be in the state where Alice agrees that Bob sees X, Bob agrees that Alice sees not-X, or that one was in a superposition or whatever. The general logic here is about as banal as Banno portrayed it outside of the QM context and @Andrew M portrayed it within the context of the paper in the OP. Collapse is observer dependent, great, we have established something about nature. — fdrake
I would remind any reader that a view from somewhere is a view of something. The context dependence of the production of a theory; through whatever intersubjective validation mechanisms you like; does nothing to diminish the truth of well established claims using methods consistent with the theory (or theoretical context). — fdrake
Yes, the calculation of the age of the universe is done with respect to a reference frame in which its expansion is isotropic. But:
You can still make ancestral statements within the frame — fdrake
What this argument reveals is that the conditions of possibility for the sense of ancestral statements require us to be able to think of a world indifferent to any given; any conditioning sensibility or emergent system of intersubjective validation. The meaningfulness of ancestral statements requires us to adjust our sophisticated intuitions about the a-priori nature of the correlation between thought and being to include the ability to interpret, since we inhabit, a world radically indifferent to any conceptual distinction. Nature becomes a curmudgeonly gainsayer who can refuse to yield to any determination of theory or sensibility; it will shout "NO!" whenever it bloody well likes and may not speak our language. — fdrake
The notion rejected here is the notion of absolute, or observer-independent, state of a system; equivalently, the notion of observer-independent values of physical quantities. The thesis of the present work is that by abandoning such a notion (in favor of the weaker notion of state –and values of physical quantities– relative to something), quantum mechanics makes much more sense.
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Let me summarize the path covered. I started from the distinction between observer and observed-system. I assumed (hypothesis 1) that all systems are equivalent, so that any observer can be described by the same physics as any other system. In particular, I assumed that an observer that measures a system can be described by quantum mechanics. I have analyzed a fixed physical sequence of events E, from two different points of observations, the one of the observer and the one of a third system, external to the measurement. I have concluded that two observers give different accounts of the same physical set of events (main observation).
Rather than backtracking in front of this observation, and giving up the commitment to the belief that all systems are equivalent, I have decided to take this experimental fact at its face value, and consider it as a starting point for understanding the world. If different observers give different descriptions of the state of the same system, this means that the notion of state is observer dependent. I have taken this deduction seriously, and have considered a conceptual scheme in which the notion of absolute observer-independent state of a system is replaced by the notion of information about a system that a physical system may possess.
Information and probability are dual notions; wherever you have a probability distribution you have an entropy. The connection between the two is particularly intimate for discrete random variables - like when there is a given probability of being in one of countably many eigenstates of an operator. Quantum entropy measures the degree of mixing in a state; how close it is to behaving in a singular eigenstate (unless I'm misinterpreting, I am both rusty and mostly uneducated here). Information measures are derivable from probability distributions, but the process of mapping a distribution to an entropy value is not invertible - so the two notions can't be taken as inter-definable. As in, if you have an entropy, you have a single number, which could be generated from lots of different quantum states and probability distributions.
I'm sure there are problems, but I think there are good reasons to believe that information is just as much a part of nature as wave functions. — fdrake
Also, I use information theory in its information-theory meaning (Shannon): information is a measure of the number of states in which a system can be – or in which several systems whose states are physically constrained (correlated) can be. Thus, a pen on my table has information because it points in this or that direction. We do not need a human being, a cat, or a computer, to make use of this notion of information.
The wiki table on interpretations lists Copenhagen as a non-local interpretation, and I don't understand that. My knowledge of a system doesn't change due to an event that happens elsewhere. But I suppose that my knowledge of a distant system (like the distant half of an entangled pair) changes immediately upon my measurement of its local sibling, so maybe that's why they list it as a non-local interpretation. — noAxioms