Having multiple interpretations of things does not create inconsistencies. — boethius
However, for those curious, the block universe interpretation is as easy in quantum mechanics as classical mechanics. There are just many more paths through the block associated with any particle — boethius
If we want to add "wave function collapse" (which the point of contemplating the "cosmic wave function" is that we don't need to ever add a wave function collapse, if we remove the hypothesis of conscious observers that see definite things) then the many potential world lines associated with a particle collapse in the block to the, if not one location, then "smaller region" anytime the wave function collapses in this block universe. — boethius
Again, the only reason to postulate "time" as some sort of changing singular experience in our quantum block universe is if we want to contemplate the idea that some of the "particle world lines" represent a conscious being that experiences "time" as some changing singular experience. However, if we had no observers in our quantum block universe there is nothing in the math that would tell us time is some special thing as we understand time to be in our experience. — boethius
An egregious version of this to show the point is that a Nazi or white supremacist who disagreed with me, is making a bad assessment. — schopenhauer1
However, it is harder to understand how any neuro-typical (if that's a thing?) person constantly misevaluates due to strong genetic, environmental, and social pressures. — schopenhauer1
But I am pointing to what the other side of that coin is, which is that it is really a bounded set of options within the limits of the conditions of life. — schopenhauer1
Further, this is pretty much equivalent to a game that one must do- the game of life itself.. It has a set of systemic rules to "master" to some extent, and a series of challenges, many of which are not known beforehand to overcome. One can roll all of these aspects into the "challenge/overcoming challenge game". — schopenhauer1
You can say "these are acceptable", but then I will point to the fact that people throughout history have made wrong evaluations. A lack of perspective in how life is bad is possibly part of the problem for these bad judgements. Our bias to see the options and not the limitations, is one big part I think. In other words, "You have options!" is thus refuted, because it is "bounded in limits", and the limits have been pointed out X, Y, Z.. As I have been doing in many of my posts. — schopenhauer1
This would be violating the threshold of dignity. — schopenhauer1
and its options within limits, sufficiently so that is indeed similar to the lifeguard situation on second look. — schopenhauer1
It can be the case people have the wrong assessment. — schopenhauer1
entertain the possibility that someone can think life doesn’t meet the threshold without being wrong and biased — khaled
Your caught up on the idea that something that seems pervasive must make it thus true or insulated from being in the category of bad judement, possibly due to lack of perspective in this case. — schopenhauer1
Reminds of “feminists” going on about how terrible the patriarchy is, and whenever someone challenges their views it’s “oh you’re just a man you wouldn’t know” or “oh you’re just a patriarchy slave you wouldn’t know (in case of women)” — khaled
If one describes the whole universe this way, there is nothing logically inconsistent within the math of saying the whole 4 dimensions (or however many dimensions you have in your system) physically exist (in some substance intuition sense) as one 4 dimensional block. — boethius
this is why there is no interference pattern even if you do not "look" at your experiment until the end. — boethius
Interference patterns disappear, not because of wave collapse, but because of running a different experiment, where phase is not preserved through both slits; and without the same phase going through both slits, the interference pattern does not emerge — boethius
However, if you put your experiment in the box with Schrödinger's cat, how is it described quantum mechanically? The particles, the detectors, the AI are all in superpositions of the different possibilities of when you open the box. — boethius
If we look at the math of quantum physics, there is no logical inconsistency in just letting the wave function propagate indefinitely without any "collapses". — boethius
But you (not you in particular) have an object-world, a real-world, in the back of your mind all the time. It’s assumed, inviolable, unchallengeable. You’re not engaging with philosophy until you challenge this innate realism — Wayfarer
Objects and subjects arise together, you don’t have one without the other. — Wayfarer
We wanted to find a Democritean atom - something that was utterly real, a literal atom, a fundamentally real object. Instead, we get an equation which describes a range of possibilities, and it takes a measurement to pull the real rabbit out of the statistical hat. Seems suspiciously like magic. Nobody really knows if the equation is objectively real and the ‘collapse’ literally occurs. That’s part of the problem!
Sure. But you seem incredibly sure that the collapse literally occurs, moreover as a result of our conscious awareness.
And the measurement, again, doesn't have to be done by a conscious agent. I've given countless possible experiments now. It simply is not the case that without a conscious agent seeing the results, that the collapse doesn't occur. I'll repeat what I said to boethius:
— Wayfarer
We can know whether or not a quantum wave is collapsed or not without observing it, by observing its consequences in each case (collapsed or uncollapsed). — khaled
That’s why those arguments among the pioneers of this subject were so intense and vehement. Heisenberg recalled being literally reduced to tears. Seriously, do some more reading. That’s all for now. — Wayfarer
1- Minds require brains
2- Brains require resolved quantum states
3- Therefore minds require resolved quantum states — khaled
You're saying the MWI solves the problem we're talking about, but somehow the problem doesn't even exist for the proposed solution you are arguing about that "consciousness collapses wave functions". — boethius
which, before we look, is entirely coherent to believe the measuring apparatus is in the superimposition of the different measurement outcomes — boethius
Adding a "measuring apparatus" in the box with Schrödinger's cat, doesn't change the thought experiment. — boethius
The question is what state these measuring devices are in before we look at them? — boethius
This is the problem! That's exactly the point! Is its real nature particle-like or wave-like. Well, it depends on which experiment you conduct. Some will give you wave, some particle. 'But what is it really?'
Silence. — Wayfarer
‘ What we observe is not nature in itself but nature exposed to our method of questioning,’ said Heisenberg. See the connection with Kant? That we know phenomena, what appears to us. What is it really, though? — Wayfarer
So please stop saying I'm 'peddling conspiracy theories', it's just insulting. — Wayfarer
what happens is that we receive stimuli through the sense-gates and we interpret these stimuli to 'create' a world — Wayfarer
And evolutionary theory, being a form of naturalism, takes the reality of nature for granted. Whereas 'the nature of reality' is being called into question by the discoveries of physics. — Wayfarer
Your theory, which is presumably scientifically realist neo-Darwinian evolution, can't accomodate the radical implications of physics. — Wayfarer
what I'm saying is not fringe conspiracy theory, but it is deeply challenging for the taken-for-granted realism that a lot of people hold. — Wayfarer
a lot of physicists don't bother with any of this, nor do they need to. They can do physics, even wildly advanced speculative physics, without engaging with this philosophical question — Wayfarer
Now you think, that what’s collapsing the wave is us seeing the results of the measurement. Ok. Attach a measuring device on the slits. Next, make a simple AI that can distinguish between the 2 stripe pattern and an interference pattern. If the interference pattern is seen, make the machine dispense a cookie. If a 2 stripe pattern is seen, no cookie. Now run the experiment and go to the cookie dispenser without looking at anything. You will find that there are no cookies waiting for you :sad:. In other words, the measuring device was enough to collapse the wave function so a 2 stripe pattern is detected, and no cookies are dispensed. — khaled
I think that the 'observer problem' or 'measurement problem' in physics is precisely due to the fact that 'the act of observation' has a material effect on the outcome of experiments in quantum physics. — Wayfarer
It can be argued that this act of observation can be made by an apparatus, not a person, but that begs the question of why the apparatus existed in the first place — Wayfarer
and also whether anything it measures or registers constitutes information until it is interpreted by those who made the apparatus. — Wayfarer
and whether it exists uninterpreted can only ever be an assumption. — Wayfarer
What is referred to as the wave-function collapse is simply that, prior to the act of measurement or registration, there is not a particle at a definite location with definite properties — Wayfarer
The 'Copenhagen intepretation' is thought of as 'weird' is simply because of the fact that 'the observer' has a role at all. — Wayfarer
So a lot of scientifically-inclined people can't deal with the requirement to include the observer. This is not 'a conspiracy theory', it has sound philosophical basis. — Wayfarer
So what you're arguing is that the 'observer problem' or 'measurement problem' in quantum physics actually doesn't exist. — Wayfarer
Largely discarded, by whom? — Wayfarer
Where is the evidence for that? — Wayfarer
What are the alternatives? — Wayfarer
Thinking through the implications of idealism takes philosophical acumen — Wayfarer
And what, pray tell, is poisonous or conspiratorial about philosophical idealism? — Wayfarer
Nothing to do with conspiracy theories. — Wayfarer
Of course there are issues of interpretation, but many physicists since the early 20th c have evinced idealist leanings, not least Heisenberg — Wayfarer
All matter originates and exists only by virtue of a force which brings the particle of an atom to vibration and holds this most minute solar system of the atom together. We must assume behind this force the existence of a conscious and intelligent mind. This mind is the matrix of all matter. — Max Planck
Thus, for you, if the slave thinks his conditions are suitable, it is suitable. — schopenhauer1
However, if the slave had more perspective and given a chance to see the limitations, perhaps the slave would realize there was an injustice/harm done to him — schopenhauer1
existence itself has injustices that we deal with being humans having to survive, find comfort, and entertainment within a contingently harmful world (disease, disaster, dealing with other people, harmful situations, negative experiences, etc.), — schopenhauer1
in any survival task, one needed to survive in a certain socioeconomic setting (the usual mode of human survival), one can evaluate it as negative — schopenhauer1
There is nothing in quantum mechanics itself that prevents, in principle, "pan super position" of just setting up the wave function of the whole universe and letting it evolve. If we do this for the big bang or any moment after the big bang, there is nothing in quantum mechanics that forces "observations" to collapse the universal wave function. — boethius
It can evolve in time in it's wavy form indefinitely. — boethius
What makes "apparatus" special is psychics is that we consciously observe the apparatus and so see definite states of the apparatus and not superimposition of states. — boethius
Given all this, it is as reasonable to believe consciousness collapses wave functions as some entropy threshold or the like. — boethius
it is the options and not the limitations that people gravitate to such that they don't feel that life itself has the impositions similarly to the other limiting forced events. — schopenhauer1
what you, I, or he would have wanted. — schopenhauer1
Yes, economic realities make up a significant and pervasive portion of life. It is a condition. — schopenhauer1
This meets the threshold as discussed earlier. — schopenhauer1
This relates back to my main point in that the limitations and conditions of surprise parties, on a subject that has self-reflection and can evaluate their own existential situation, is pervasively controlled by various necessary conditions that one must deal with. — schopenhauer1
That’s because it’s philosophically demanding and goes against the grain of realism, — Wayfarer
1.) It's near impossible to escape either work, free-riding off other's work, homelessness, or death (suicide or otherwise).
2.) It's near impossible to overcome the contingent harms that impress themselves on each and every person daily.
3.) It is near impossible to overcome the boundedness of being a particular animal living in a place, time, etc. — schopenhauer1
They only think of the range within the boundedness and not the limits themselves. — schopenhauer1
There is nothing abstract about genetic modifications, sperms and eggs, couples choosing between the life and extirpation of their child. These decisions have demonstrable effects and involve real behavior. — NOS4A2
When a sense of morality extends no further than the skull, can be accomplished in the comfort of one's home and without any interaction with real beings — NOS4A2
So using the dignity threshold idea, if the magnitude of the surprise is controlling another person to a high degree, then yes. — schopenhauer1
Ok, so let's add in that the game is definitely not something of infinite pleasure. People don't just feel pleasure from these activities or just existing. There is a lot of intermediate to negative values placed on each activity in the game. So the game is not one of paradise proportions but much more mediocre. Wonka just doesn't have the ability to create "the best of all worlds" for each individual experience. — schopenhauer1
If he creates them, he is forcing nothing and morality doesn't factor into it at all. — NOS4A2
So as long as Willy can keep his contestants from feeling forced, the game itself is okay for Willy to perpetuate and continue to force? — schopenhauer1
This does seem any different than just experimental apparatus causing wave function collapse, just eyes being apparatus. — boethius
(And before you say it's not infinite, just near infinite there's so many: any finite number is totally miniscule compared to infinity; the largest number that can possibly be represented in the entire accessible universe using all available energy and material and building up the most compact way to represent the largest numbers in the axiomatic system of your choice; is a minuscule number incredibly close to zero when compared to infinity). — boethius
Why must we be able to count worlds for it to be science? — khaled
If you collapse a wave function of an electron there is an infinite number of points where it can end up (with there being an infinite number of points between two points and all that). Does that make wave function collapse psuedoscience too?
What about particle decay? It is completely random, and there is an infinite number of times at which it can decay. No apparatus can measure all the possible times a particle can decay. — khaled
There is no such experiment proposed, even in principle. — boethius
By-the-by, no apparatus can count to infinity and so infinite worlds is pseudoscience — boethius
Nothing could be more ‘complicated’ that the idea that everything that happens, happens an infinite number of times in an infinite number of parallel worlds. And it does this, just to avoid the implications of the measurement problem. — Wayfarer
You will find that the idea that the observing subject is part of the result is not at all ‘fringe’, it’s the central philosophical issue. — Wayfarer
The Mental Universe — Wayfarer
Bernard D’Espagnat’s acceptance speech for the Templeton Prize. — Wayfarer
But it does mean that it’s the view of at least some physicists. — Wayfarer
What I don't believe is that it is resolvable by experiment — boethius
I said as reasonable — boethius
It's not an experiment, it's not science. It's pseudoscience with all the same trappings of other pseudosiences: plausible sounding reasoning, anecdotes, unfalsefiable claims.
I'm just not in denial about it. — boethius
do you think it's reasonable to believe that consciousness is required for quantum wave collapse? — khaled
As reasonable as believing there's some people that have a consciousness made of "expertise" in some way. — boethius
As reasonable as believing there's some people that have a consciousness made of "expertise" in some way. — boethius
Be that as it may — Wayfarer
So ask yourself the question, why is that something to avoid — Wayfarer
and why does the alternative propose that the universal wavefunction is ‘objectively real’? — Wayfarer