So what Carroll means is that fields are fundamental and particles (and everyday things generally) emerge from the interaction of those underlying fields.
Or, as Wikipedia puts it, "QFT treats particles as excited states (also called quanta) of their underlying fields, which are—in a sense—more fundamental than the basic particles."
— Andrew M
‘in a sense’ ;-)
When it comes to this matter, that phrase carries a lot of weight. — Wayfarer
Right, we are talking about the temporal ordering of two events, when the light reaches the front of the traincar, and when the light reaches the back. Special relativity allows for contradiction in the ordering of these events. — Metaphysician Undercover
I simply meant that without the selection postulate, it seems that RQM implies the splitting.
Anyway, I agree with you. RQM seems simply silent on this point. — boundless
Well, more or less I always understood RQM in that way! :smile: ... After my dialogue with noAxioms, I am not sure about it. In fact, the 'relativization' of existence makes perfect sense in RQM. For each 'Alice' (each 'Wigner's friend') the other(s) cannot be said to 'exist'. — boundless
But unless one adds a selection postulate, I believe that before the measurement 'Alice'/'Wigner's friend' can safely say that all 'Alice-s'/'Wigner's friends' will remember 'her'/'him'. What do you think? — boundless
"In the same sense" means using the words in the same way. It has nothing to do with reference frames unless "temporal order" has a different meaning from one reference frame to the next. — Metaphysician Undercover
So a field would be the property of something because there needs to be something actual which has that potential For example an electromagnetic field is a property of an object. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure, absolutely. I'm not querying whether fields are real or the effectiveness of field theory. The point I was taking issue with was 'Particles are what we see. Fields are what reality is made of.' — Wayfarer
Ok, well as you say they are all indeed different cases. But suppose that as per above, not everything that is possible actualizes. Hence also in this case, only one 'event' happens. Of course, I am assuming that not everything happens. But note that if you, instead, accept the 'existence' of all those Alice-s, how RQM is really different from MWI (except for the universal wave-function)? I believe that Tegmark pointed this out to Rovelli. — boundless
I think the assertion that fields are what ‘reailty Is made of’ indicates deep confusion. We don’t even know what fields are - all we see is effects in respect of those particular phenomena in which field effects are visible. But what if there are non-physical fields, like Rupert Sheldrake’s morphic fields, or other forms of fields, like mental fields? There’s nothing to say there can’t be. Oh, I know - ‘scientists don’t think so.’ But that’s because their entire approach is based on studying matter, particles, radiation, and the other phenomena that can be studied using physical instruments. What’s that great analogy? 1. Metal detectors have had far greater success in finding coins and other metallic objects in more places than any other method. 2. Therefore what metal detectors reveal to us (coins and other metallic objects) is all that is real. — Wayfarer
I think that the relativity of simultaneity allows for the same type of contradiction. It allows that it is true that two events are simultaneous, and also true that two events are not simultaneous. That is contradiction, plain and simple. The relativity of simultaneity undermines the objectivity of the law of non-contradiction in a very fundamental way. This law states that the same predication cannot be both true and false at the same time. The relativity of simultaneity allows discretion, choice, in the judgement of "at the same time". — Metaphysician Undercover
Whether or not I agree with Carroll that reality is made of fields is irrelevant to the issue here. — Metaphysician Undercover
This emphasizes the fact that what's commonly thought of as objective is a psychic construction which happens to be mostly wrong.
Taking QM into account means we have to change which 3rd person statements we consider to be true. So the OP is really just a matter of semantics. — frank
Redefining "objective reality" so that contradiction is acceptable in an objective reality is not what I would consider as an acceptable solution. — Metaphysician Undercover
As far as I understand "fields", they are always modeled as potentials, and this includes "the more fundamental fields" of QFT. If you understand them as a model of something actual, then I think you misunderstand the ontology of QFT. But perhaps I'm wrong, and you can show me how a field is modeled as something actual. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is the point of the op then. The classical sense of "object" can be rejected altogether, and we no longer have any objective reality, everything is a "relative state". — Metaphysician Undercover
The field itself is constructed as potential, then you layer another potential on top. — Metaphysician Undercover
Take an electron for example. It must be a particle in the classical sense, because the structure of molecules and atoms is dependent on those particles. — Metaphysician Undercover
OK, so as I explained above to andrewk, I'll accept that a field is assumed to be more than imaginary. The problem is that it is modeled as the potential for activity, rather than a real active thing. So the issue is with the modeling technique, not the assumption that an imaginary thing is real. Therefore there is an inconsistency between the assumption, that the field is a real active thing, and the modeling of the field, as the potential for activity. — Metaphysician Undercover
don't think physics provides any reason to doubt that the elementary particles (as described in the Standard Model) exist and have measurable physical properties just as everyday macroscopic objects do.
— Andrew M
I don't agree with this. I've spoken to physicists who say that there is no reason to believe that what they call "particles" in the Standard Model, are actually particles at all. That's just the word that is used. — Metaphysician Undercover
The issue here is that a "field" is an imaginary thing, created by mathematics. — Metaphysician Undercover
Could you explain what a Higgs field is? — frank
That's the interpretive problem in a nutshell. — Wayfarer
Isn’t the ontological status of fundamental particles also precisely what is at issue in all this? The ‘Copenhagen interpretation’ does, after alll, say that ‘the particle doesn’t exist until it’s measured.’ — Wayfarer
Yes, I think that is the case, electrons are measured as effects, and most forms of measurement are like this. — Metaphysician Undercover
So you see it like - everything is a quantum system, just sometimes the corrections from quantum mechanics to macroscopic systems are sometimes negligible? — fdrake
The physical properties of a photon are able to be measured in the same way as for any other particle. If you want to know a photon's position or speed, you set up an experiment and measure it.
— Andrew M
What is measured is the effect of the photon. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure, QM is consistent with special relativity, but I don't think it's correct to call the properties of a photon "physical". A photon has an effect on physical things, and it might have a physical cause, and it is described by mathematics, but according to special relativity, light does not have spatial-temporal properties. The speed of light is the limit to spatial-temporal properties. So how exactly would you describe these "physical properties" which light quanta have? — Metaphysician Undercover
Quantum particles are even smaller, aka subatomic particles, and not properly described as particles but that's language for you. — Benkei
Or as Dustin Lazarovici reacted to the paper: "A group of physicists claims to have found experimental evidence that there are no objective facts observed in quantum experiments. For some reason, they have still chosen to share the observations from their quantum experiment with the outside world.
...
In particular, it doesn’t mean that measurement outcomes, once obtained, are not objective. It rather reminds us that a measurement is not a purely passive perception but an active interaction that “brings about” a particular outcome and can affect the state of the measured system in the process."
Basically, the only way we would have to let go the assumption of an objective reality is if we were to insist on locality (against this and other experimental results) in which case nothing really exists but thank God it's local! (pace Tim Maudlin) — Benkei
What is necessary is to either release the confines of special relativity, allowing light to have physical properties, and describe those properties, or devise a way of observing non-physical properties. — Metaphysician Undercover
RQM indeed does not claim anything about what path is taken. Any statement about the path taken (such as it taking one or the other) would be a counterfactual one, and RQM is not a counterfactual interpretation. — noAxioms
Right, that's the point, there are epistemic issues with "observations" no matter how you define the term. Sometimes the "observer" might be focused so as to miss many possibly relevant factors. In a human observer, this is one's attention. The person might observe with eyes and not ears, or vise versa, and miss some relevant information. In the case of an observing machine, its capabilities are limited by the intent of the design. — Metaphysician Undercover
Just a curiosity: has anyone ever suggested an interpretation where the 'universal wavefunction' is real (like in MWI) and a single branch is 'selected' by a probabilistic rule (as in Consistent Histories as I understand it)?
This would be similar to the 'unreal' interpretation of MWI referenced in the Wikipedia article about MWI where only one branch is 'real' and the others are not. The only difference is that here there is an explicit axiom of a probabilistic selection. — boundless
On the other hand, it is shown that dynamical collapse models, of the type originally proposed by Ghirardi-Rimini-Weber, can be re-interpreted as set selection criteria within a quantum histories framework, in which context they appear as candidate solutions to the set selection problem. — Quantum Histories - Adrian Kent
Ok, I see. Much confusion about this arises probably from an unconscious tendency to think in terms of a 'singular history' (i.e. a fixed present for everyone...), so to speak. But that's precisely what both Relativity (if one does not want to endorse the idea of a 'block universe') and RQM question. It is, however, simply very difficult (or impossible?) to 'overcome' that tendency... — boundless
The photon definitely takes both paths relative to the interferometer because it takes no measurements until the paths join up again. — noAxioms
Now the issue is that any information collected by the "reference frame", as "inanimate object", needs to be interpreted by human beings before it is useful as observational evidence. The interpretation is theory laden. So the idea that a reference frame can give observational information which is independent of intentionality is false.
The problem is that the theory laden interpretation cannot account for all the possibilities. For example, I put a dish of water in the sun, as my observer. I measure that water every fifteen minutes and derive a rate of evaporation as the day progresses. But I am assuming that evaporation is the only thing happening, I don't know if something else happened to the water, like a creature went and drank some when I wasn't looking. So the inanimate reference frame, as an observer, is only as good, and reliable, as the principles used to interpret the information. — Metaphysician Undercover
I've seen that people use the word 'know' a lot when talking about observation/information transmission/interactions involving energy exchange, but 'know' looks to be used in different contexts to where just 'correlation' would be appropriate - like, if 2 particles are entangled, it doesn't seem typical to say that one particle 'knows' the state (distribution) of the other. Examples in this thread are the use of 'Alice knows that Bob knows...' towards the start in the discussion between boundless, @noAxioms and @Andrew M.
What do you mean when you use 'know' in this sense? What is the (range of appropriate) physical interpretation(s) of it, if it has one? — fdrake
Well, I am not persuaded that it says just that. As I said to noAxioms in my previous post, it seems that the only way for O to have 'information' about 'himself' (or better 'itself', to avoid anthropomorphic language as RQM does) it must consider 'himself'/'itself' as an object to another system. To me this somewhat makes sense. — boundless
Let me ask a question that I posed to noAxioms. According to RQM, the state of S (let's say that S is an electron) is observed dependent. To be more precise, S can have a definite state, e.g. spin 'up', for O but not for O'. For O' it is still in a superposition. Now O' can ask O if 'it' 'sees' S in a definite state. O answers 'yes'. So, now it seems that according to O' the state of S 'collapsed' to a definite result. O' does not know which one, however. It seems that, at this point, for O, S has spin 'up' but for O', the spin can be either 'up' or 'down'. So, it seems that there are two 'branches' (using MWI language). But when O' 'opens the box' (or 'enters the room', as Wigner does in the Wigner's friend scenario), O' must agree with O according to RQM. But why? How is this justified in RQM? I mean: how the 'disappearance' of the 'other branch' is justified under RQM? — boundless
(edit: I am not sure that there is no more interference for O' when O says that he sees a definite state to O') — boundless
The key element of the experiment is that the message contains no information about which outcome has occurred and thus should not lead to a collapse of the quantum state assigned by the superobserver. Imagine that the observer encodes her message in state |message>5 of system 5. This state is factorized out from the total state, |psi(t')> = 1/sqrt(2)(|z+>1|z+>2|z->3|knows "up">4 + |z->1|z->2|z+>3|knows "down">4) |message>5, and thus the communication of the message does not destroy the superposition. — On the quantum measurement problem, p18 - Caslav Brukner
What human beings and table lamps have in common is that they are substantial and have form.
— Andrew M
And what they DON'T share is 'the ability to form a perspective'. — Wayfarer
Right, but we support abstract theories with empirical evidence gathered from observations. If, what is called an "observer" is not really an observer by rigorous standards, then the biases inherent within that definition of "observer" must be accounted for or else "empirical evidence" will not really be empirical evidence. — Metaphysician Undercover
It makes perfect sense. The photon cannot take one path, unmeasured. That would be the counterfactual definiteness that any local interpretation denies. — noAxioms
That's your brain interpreting it that way. The reflection very much still appears to raise the arm on the same side, but appears to have switched front to back. — noAxioms
I don't see that as superimposing or interference. — noAxioms
Prior to that measurement, there is no collapse, so the wave function puts the photon on both paths, not on 'either' path. — noAxioms
Anyway, note that there is a problem of self-reference even in Relational approach(es). I suggest you to read section four of the SEP article about 'Relational Quantum Mechanics': https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/qm-relational/#SelRefSelMea . It is a discussion about the possibility of self-measurement. (Maybe Andrew M and @noAxioms will find it intriguing too!) — boundless
Also, both she and Shimony are in fact clear that 'potentialities' for them are in some sense non-local. — boundless
Let me, however, ask you the same question that I asked to noAxioms.
Consider an electron. According to RQM, its state is 'perspective'-dependent. But all of them are in agreement that it is an 'electron'. So, is 'out there' something identifiable as an 'electron' even when is not measured? What I am saying is that it seems we need after all something invariant, equal to all perspectives. Is this compatible with RQM? :smile: — boundless
Interestingly, it seems that RQM agrees with the Consistent Histories interpretation about the lack of a 'single history'.
...
Well, I really find this interpretation (at least as it is presented there) somewhat difficult to understand. So, I still have not formed an idea about it. In fact, I somehow have a problem to really distinguish it from MWI.
What do you think of Consistent Histories? — boundless
Then, as Bitbol points out, we overlook or forget the "role of the observer" in all of this, assuming that we're viewing the world as if from no perspective or no point of view. — Wayfarer
The problem is that anything within that "system" needs to be interpreted according to standards before the system has any observational value. The "system" has no observational value without those human standards. — Metaphysician Undercover
An observer is one who takes notice of (and this means pays attention to) the thing which is observed. — Metaphysician Undercover
Right. And by my reckoning table lamps can’t do that. — Wayfarer
They're almost the same thing, with different definitions of 'is real'. RQM says this world is real to me and a different world is real to anything else (the cat say), so they're both talking about different worlds. MWI says they're all equally real, and RQM says none are real, only that there are relations between worlds and observers.
...
Still, there are very 'real' differences between MWI and RQM, and I don't see how either Rovelli and Tegmark are going to convince the other that they hold the opposite view. — noAxioms
My answer to the above question is that perhaps there isn't anything, and thus there is no need to have to explain its being. — noAxioms
What is interference? It seems to be 'maybe' as an answer to a question not yet asked, a measurement not yet taken. So X = square root of 2 is 1.414 but also -1.414 and both those values can work through my equation until a choice must be make before the mathematics can continue. That's a measurement, and now there are two equations that proceed in different directions using a now real value for X instead of one in superposition. — noAxioms
Regarding Kaster's approach I am not sure to call it 'non-local'. — boundless
To be more complete, in fact I lean towards RQM and CI. The problem I have with RQM is that 'information' maybe is not something well-defined in relation to all physical systems. But as I said in my previous post, this is a quite controversial point. If 'information' is something that can be defined in relation to all physical system, then RQM is IMO the best choice.
If not, maybe something like Bitbol's interpretation (with maybe some elements of 'actuality/potentiality' dualism) would be best.
I am simply undecided. — boundless
There are different takes. For IMHO a very interesting Neo-Kantian non-representionalist reading (among the 'Copenaghists'), check this article of Michel Bitbol (I already quoted it in this thread - I quote it again here for convenience): http://www.bourbaphy.fr/bitbol.pdf (according to him, Bohr's epistemology was close to Kant's views...). Or, if one prefers the video of the talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pYRLapWBqJY.
Another instance of interpretation of the wave-function in terms of potentiality-actuality can be found in this paper by Kastner et al: https://arxiv.org/abs/1709.03595. — boundless
Actually, this interpretation of the wave-function is also held by some Copenaghists. For instance, Abner Shminoy wrote in the older version of the SEP on Bell's Theorem:
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 link is to the section 'Philosophical Comments' of the article - Shimony lists other possible positions. — boundless
That is one thin explanation. If what Alice did wasn't complex enough to objectively collapse the wave function, she should be able to measure the subsequent superposition herself and not leave it to Bob. Of course, QM theory won't allow that, so the 'thin' explanation see to go against QM itself.
Of course maybe I just don't understand this explanation. I have not read your link and am not sure that I would find the answer there satisfactory. — noAxioms
In my eyes, outcomes 1 and 2 would indicate fundamentally new physics. I will not consider these cases further and regard quantum theory to be a universal physical theory. This leaves us with situation 3 as the only possible outcome of Deutsch's thought experiment. The outcome is compatible with the Everett interpretation: each copy of the observer observes a definite but different outcome in different branches of the (multi)universe. The outcome is compatible with the Copenhagen interpretation too, but it is rarely discussed what the implications of this claim are for our understanding of physical reality within the interpretation. The rest of the current manuscript is devoted to this problem. — On the quantum measurement problem - Caslav Brukner
I'd rather see them sink RQM. Always best to have ones own cage rattled once in a while. — noAxioms
Great. Interestingly, I discovered that the same point is made by Carlo Rovelli to defend his 'relational' view, see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vbYeAaCloiM . At 4:55, Valentini makes the same question that he made in the other video (namely that different observers might disagree about what happens) and at 53:52 Rovelli answers by citing the Andromeda Paradox - so we are in good company :wink: . It is a very good discussion, BTW (other than Rovelli and Valentini, also Saunders and Wallace (and others) participate in the discussion). This might also be of interest to noAxioms. — boundless
[4:55] Valentini sets up the scenario as Rovelli deciding to speak at the conference (or not) based on measuring a particle spin as spin up (or spin down). Rovelli measured spin up and so here they are talking at the conference. However a super-intelligent being in the future measures interference.
[53:52] Rovelli: Antony asks, "Carlo, some super-intelligent is believing that you are not here because in his wave function you're superimposing, there's no fact of the matter. Does this bother you?"
I think it doesn't because it's exactly the kind of thing that happens in theoretical physics all the time. I think it's very similar to what happens in special relativity. If I take Einstein's simultaneity convention, right now in Andromeda there is something which has already happened with respect to the - not the past cone but the simultaneity convention - with respect to which I haven't happened yet with respect to this.
This makes no sense whatsoever but that's the structure of the world. The relation between when things happen for who are complicated. I think with this guy in the future, I could talk if I could survive until then, I could talk to him and we would agree and the fact that now, for him, in the future before I interact with him there is a discrepancy in what we see doesn't really bother me.
Valentini: For him, there wouldn't be a fact of the matter about the past?
Rovelli: That's right.
(3) All events in the past light cone of a given event are real (i.e., fixed and certain) for an observer at that event.
The reason this accounts for all of our observations is that information can’t travel faster than light, so anything we observe at a given event can only give information about the past light cone of that event.
Since none of this is new (it is demanded by QM right from the early days), how do any of the objective collapse interpretations get around this? Does this experiment change something? Did they expect a different result? I don't think so. — noAxioms
Yeah, that's a nice way IMO to avoid issues with relativity.
And BTW, as I said to NoAxioms a similar problem arises in Relativity, if one wants to avoid the 'block universe idea' as suggested by Rietdijk-Putnam argument(here's the link to the Wikipedia article). There is a very nice 'insight article' on Physics Forums that gives a counter-argument (which is reminiscent of the reasoning on which, for instance, RQM is based): https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/block-universe-refuting-common-argument/. — boundless
One of the two propositions in such instances must be true and the other false, but we cannot say determinately that this or that is false, but must leave the alternative undecided. One may indeed be more likely to be true than the other, but it cannot be either actually true or actually false. It is therefore plain that it is not necessary that of an affirmation and a denial, one should be true and the other false. For in the case of that which exists potentially, but not actually, the rule which applies to that which exists actually does not hold good. — Aristotle, On Interpretation, §9
It seems not contradictory at all for Bob to find the state of the photon still in superposition, despite the conflict wording in the article. — noAxioms
I believe that Rovelli himself treats the wave-function as not descriptive. So, he would not say that there are 'many physical branches'. — boundless
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). — boundless
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
Well, yeah I honestly do not know how you can explain that if you assume that the wave-function is not 'real'. So, I unfortunately cannot give you a response. — boundless
If the wave-function is taken as 'real', then the situation is still different from MWI IMO (as I explained above, hoping that it made some sense LOL...). Mauro Dorato apparently tried to explain RQM in terms of dispositions, check: https://arxiv.org/pdf/1309.0132.pdf — boundless
Don't know what you mean by 'reverse polarity' — noAxioms
If Alice discards the result like that, then it wasn't done. Memory of having done it doesn't change that. A mirror doesn't reflect a photon. It measures it and sends a new photon out at the new angle and same polarity, and is afterwards unaffected by having done that. It doesn't count as a measurement since the photon is still in superposition. — noAxioms
Maybe also Andrew M and @noAxioms might find the above linked videos interesting. — boundless
The price to pay for RQM:
We need to get rid of the notion of:
- absolute (observer-independent) state of a system
- absolute (observer-independent) value of a physical quantity
- absolute (observer-independent) fact
The claim of RQM is that if you take this step, everything becomes simpler (cfr: special relativity, and the need of getting rid of absolute simultaneity.) — RQM - Rovelli
"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)." [Rovelli] — boundless
I do take it as a great piece of evidence directly supporting the relational interpretation. I agree in full with the way they interpret it,” he says. “It is fantastic that ‘ideal experiments’ of the past become real experiments of today. — Rovelli in New Scientist (Quantum experiment suggests there really are ‘alternative facts’)
The funny stuff aside; how can you "measure" a superposition or how can a measurement be in a superposition? I thought any observation causes the wave function to collapse in a single eigenstate and a measurement, I would think, involves an observation. — Benkei