And yet infinitely often, the zero-amplitude strikes will also happen in some worldline of the observer. Which screws any claim to have done something which has constrained the probabilities to these observed bands. — apokrisis
Under MWI, there will be infinitely many worlds in which all the bands are composed of the least likely events. So the bands will be exactly where they shouldn't be for an infinity of observers.
If you take MWI seriously, you can't take the probabilistic success of QM seriously. Everything that can happen, happens infinitely often. — apokrisis
Yet real numbers, with their infinitely many decimals, have infested almost every nook and cranny of physics, from the strengths of electromagnetic fields to the wave functions of quantum mechanics. We describe even a single bit of quantum information (qubit) using two real numbers involving infinitely many decimals.
Not only do we lack evidence for the infinite but we don’t need the infinite to do physics. — Infinity Is a Beautiful Concept – And It’s Ruining Physics - Max Tegmark
And QM is moving towards that kind of interpretation with the quantum information or quantum reconstruction projects. MWI and Bohmian Mechanics are the last gasp of an out-dated way of conceiving of physicalism. Their advocates are especially passionate probably because they know they are a passing story. :) — apokrisis
I’d also say that I don’t see how reconstruction could reduce the need for interpretation. Ultimately, however we reconstruct quantum mechanics, we’re either going to end up saying (i) that the mathematical structure thus reconstructed represents physical reality faithfully (in which case we end up with the Everett interpretation or something like it), or (ii) that it represents physical reality incompletely or inaccurately (in which case we need to fix it, which leads us to hidden-variable or dynamical-collapse theories), or (iii) that it’s not in the business of representing physical reality at all (which leads us to operationalist or neo-Copenhagen or physics-is-information approaches). — Interview with David Wallace
So, can it be affirmatively asserted that QM affirms the concept of having a 'free will'? — Posty McPostface
The Schrödinger equation describes the (deterministic) evolution of the wave function of a particle. — Wikipedia
But I think that the Platonist insight into the reality of incorporeal entities (universals and the like) requires a genuine meta-cognitive shift - a gestalt shift, if you like. — Wayfarer
And then, the question is ‘why’. What is so unpalatable about the irreducible nature of mind? Why is that such a boogeyman? It seems to me an illustration of the incredible things people will be prepared to entertain, just to avoid the possibility that materialism might not be real. Not trying to argue the case, only for reflection on it. — Wayfarer
Things exist only in relation to something (anything) else. There is no objective existence of anything, thus solving the problem of why existence exists. It doesn’t. — noAxioms
So I started with something like Ontic Structural Realism, except without the objective realism. The universe is a mathematical structure and things within it are real to each other. It is not platonic realsim. Numbers are abstract (not real) to us, but relate (are real) to each other. 7 exists in relation to 9, or to the set of integers, but our universe is not existent in relation to them any more than numbers are real to us. 13 is prime, and doesn’t require objective existence to be prime. Similarly, we don’t require objective existence to relate to other parts of the structure. This is a key concept, demonstrating why objective ontology (or lack of it) makes no difference in the relations between different parts of the same structure. — noAxioms
"Ontologically, either you're a realist or an anti-realist. Either you accept facts are real independently of the "human mind" (realist), i.e. objective, or you accept that reality is only subjective (anti-realist)." [from Research Gate]
Here I must disagree, and this seems to be the point of my OP here. He says the only alternative to an objective reality is one relative to (or supervenes on) human mind. How very anthropocentric. Ontological relativism means relative to anything, but not supervening on that thing. — noAxioms
But that isn't what measuring devices are supposed to do in the Copenhagen interpretation is it? The stuff is there. It just doesnt have any location and so forth.
So the quantum idealist (if that's what they should be called) are realists in the sense you're using. — frank
Berkeley denied the existence of substance - so whatever account you have of it cannot possibly accord with Berkelean idealism. — ProcastinationTomorrow
A realist interpretation (quantum or otherwise) may be coherent, but this comment sounds like you are suggesting that anything other than a realist interpretation of physical theory (for instance, an instrumentalist one) would be incoherent. You would need to have a strong argument for that, independent, of course, of the bare (and ceded) fact that a realist interpretation of QM is coherent. — jkg20
Ontological realism isn't necessary to physics. There are idealistic and physical schemes that are compatible with any sort of physics. Scientists don't need to sort that kind of issue out. They dont need an extra label: idea stuff vs physical stuff.
Or were you talking about some other kind of realism? — frank
The whole import of the ‘delayed choice experiment’ seems anti-realist. — Wayfarer
At issue, is the very meaning of the word ‘physical’. The difficulty is that the precise nature of whatever it is that is being measured can’t be ascertained with certainty prior to the act of measurement. — Wayfarer
Again the whole question assumes a realist perspective which is the very thing being called into question. — Wayfarer
↪Andrew M Fair enough, I stand corrected. But I still think it’s a legitimate question as to whether any actual ‘registration’ has occurred in the absence of an observer, who in such cases, creates the very machine which records the observation. — Wayfarer
What is ‘sophistry’ about claiming that ‘an observer’ is in fact an observer? Claiming that an apparatus constitutes an observer is the only ‘sophistry’ in play here. — Wayfarer
Of course the introduction of the observer must not be misunderstood to imply that some kind of subjective features are to be brought into the description of nature. The observer has, rather, only the function of registering decisions, i.e., processes in space and time, and it does not matter whether the observer is an apparatus or a human being; but the registration, i.e., the transition from the `possible' to the `actual,' is absolutely necessary here and cannot be omitted from the interpretation of quantum theory. — Werner Heisenberg
Naturally, it still makes no difference whether the observer is a man, an animal, or a piece of apparatus, but it is no longer possible to make predictions without reference to the observer or the means of observation. — Niels Bohr
Notwithstanding the fact that all apparatus are constructed by observers. (Sorry for intruding with a philosophical observation.) — Wayfarer
We say that there is "relative information" between two systems anytime the state of one is constrained by the state of the other. In this precise sense, physical systems may be said to have information about one another, with no need for a mind to play any role.
...
The world isn’t just a mass of colliding atoms; it is also a web of correlations between sets of atoms, a network of reciprocal physical information between physical systems. — Relative Information
So - it's acknowledged to be 'observer dependent', but by designating the observer as 'a reference frame' rather than as an actual scientist, then the pesky 'observer problem' with its attendant philosophical problems of 'mind' or 'consciousness' is removed from the equation. — Wayfarer
That is just one way of putting the metaphysical quandry that QM presents. But jkg20 brought out another insofar as answers to the question "what does the wave function represent" will have metaphysical consequences, and those who want to answer that question should not just help themselves to everyday notions of "observation", "measurement" and so on since those everyday notions are very definitely wrapped up with the idea of their being acts performed by conscious beings. One would be using the word "observer" in a most unusual way if one were to say that "lamps are observers", and to avoid misunderstanding it would be better not to use that word at all in that context. — ProcastinationTomorrow
Physicists use the term "observer" as shorthand for a specific reference frame from which a set of objects or events is being measured. Speaking of an observer in special relativity is not specifically hypothesizing an individual person who is experiencing events, but rather it is a particular mathematical context which objects and events are to be evaluated from. The effects of special relativity occur whether or not there is a sentient being within the inertial reference frame to witness them.
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In quantum mechanics, "observation" is synonymous with quantum measurement and "observer" with a measurement apparatus and observable with what can be measured. — Observer (special relativity)
Relational quantum mechanics (RQM) is an interpretation of quantum mechanics which treats the state of a quantum system as being observer-dependent, that is, the state is the relation between the observer and the system. — Relational quantum mechanics
I could be misconstruing your worldview, but it would appear to be a QM interpretation that is still clinging to the materialist premise that there is a mind-independent world of matter 'out there', the very notion that Kastrup, or any idealist ontology, is dubious about ... as now am I. — snowleopard
So says a conscious observer. Again, I repeat the question: What exactly is a measurement absent a conscious agent to calculate a measurement from the reactive apparatus, if that measurement apparatus itself is observer-dependent, without which isn't it all just in potentia? — snowleopard
Kastrup's claims depend on a narrow definition of realism as counterfactual definiteness, not as mind-independence
— Andrew M
You lost me there, Andrew. Care to elucidate the distinction? — Wayfarer
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.
— Relational Quantum Mechanics - Carlo Rovelli
↪Andrew M This would seem to be a radical redefinition of the word 'observer.' Surely any claim whatsoever can be rationalized, if you arbitrarily redefine words so that what you want to claim then ends up making linguistic sense. — snowleopard
Anyway - I'm reading Kastrup's essay, Making Sense of the Mental Universe, and it seems pretty carefully reasoned to me. — Wayfarer
Contextuality is a formidable challenge to the viability of realism. — Bernardo Kastrup
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 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. 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 always (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. — Relational Quantum Mechanics - Carlo Rovelli
Carlo Rovelli’s relational interpretation [Rovelli, 2008], on the other hand, sticks to plain quantum theory and embraces contextuality. Instead of loading it with unnecessary baggage, it simply interprets what quantum theory tells us about the world and bites the bullet of its implications. Rovelli’s goal “is not to modify quantum mechanics to make it consistent with [his] view of the world, but to modify [his] view of the world to make it consistent with quantum mechanics” [Rovelli, 2008: 16]. — Bernardo Kastrup
Almost everything seems to be a relation. — noAxioms
I have a hard time coming up with an example of a property. — noAxioms
Anyway, thank you for the interesting discussion! — boundless
I rescind this. The position does stake a claim here, that the universe is a universal, and that it does not have Platonic existence since that would be something concrete. — noAxioms
In Platonic realism, universals do not exist in the way that ordinary physical objects exist ... Platonic realism holds that universals do exist in a broad, abstract sense... — Platonic realism - Wikipedia
Then the position I am proposing is not compatible with the Aristotelian position. To frame what I am proposing in such terms is to say that our universe is a (non-Platonic) universal with no necessary particulars. For it to be a particular, said particular would need to be in (relative-to) some container universe which again would be a universal at its foundations. — noAxioms
As for the apples, I don't see how 2+2=4 would necessarily not be the case just because there are no apples (or any other concrete particular) to instantiate the relationship. — noAxioms
I agree that deterministic theories are context-dependent.
What I do not understand however is how can something like "free agency" arise from deterministic processes (or a combination between deterministic and random processes). But as you said, this is normal since no theory has ever explained it :wink: — boundless
I, too, disagree with Tegmark's Platonism. But I disagree with computabilism because I think that, for example, the "workings" of our minds cannot be explained in computabilistic terms. At the same time however our theories to be both consistent and complete must be computable. This shows, however, the limits of physics IMO. (and of course I did not mean to "lower" the importance of it with this observation :wink: ) — boundless
I observe it, being part of it. Indeed, I could not observe it from outside, lacking a particular ‘it’ to observe. It could be simulated, but then it is the simulation being observed, not the structure itself.
Again, I reach for the simplest cases like 2+2=4, which has no particular, but the relation between 2+2 and 4 exists, particular or not. I can simulate (perform the addition) to observe this, but doing so is just for the benefit of the performer of the operation and has no effect on the truth of the relation. — noAxioms
I don’t really claim anything one way or the other on universals. I need to see how this fits in, since you seem to lean on the problem of universals as a counter-argument to my idea here. — noAxioms
Being concrete would be an objective context, the larger context of all things that actually exist, not in relation to anything. I guess I’m trying to argue against your point, that concreteness is necessary.
What do you mean by ‘abstract’? Just not-concrete? The word has connotations of being a mental construct (thought or idea), which is not the direction I’m going. Our universe is not necessarily conceived of by something not part of the structure. — noAxioms
The meaning might be indispensible human baggage, but the structure itself (not necessarily any ‘equation’ that describes it to an observer for whom it means something) seems not to require said observer. OK, ours comes with humans built in, so it seems to be a structure that finds meaning in itself, but that’s an internal relation, not ontology. — noAxioms
We seem to just be asserting opposite views. I don’t see either of us making good justification of our positions. Doing my best. I don’t claim that there is no ontology, just that it is not necessary. To me, that seems to put at least some burden on you to show (not just assert) that it is necessary. The humans in the uninstantiated universe would have the exact same observations and thoughts as the humans in the instantiated universe. Do you disagree? It seems to assume that humans are part of said universe, and not external experiencers of it, so kind of discarding dualist biases, which is hard to do. — noAxioms
I agree that your definition is enough to assign responsibility for one's actions. The average argument defines free will differently, but then incorrectly concludes that I should not be held responsible (on Earth) for my actions. "You shouldn't jail me, physics made me do it!". This is bunk. Physics will also toss your sorry posterior in the clink, and by the same argument, is not wrong for doing so. — noAxioms
The "effective" free will advocated by compatibilism in fact is not a "real" free will, but simply it is a statement of "unpredictability". — boundless
This (and similar things I read some time ago but unfortunately I cannot remeber now), seem to suggest that if there is a "theory of everything" then "physical laws" are computable. — boundless
The point I wanted to discuss is that IF our universe is such a structure, it need not be instantiated in some larger context to explain empirical experience. — noAxioms
Before discussing whether the mathematical universe hypothesis is correct, however, there is a more urgent question: what does it actually mean? To understand this, it helps to distinguish between two ways of viewing our external physical reality. One is the outside overview of a physicist studying its mathematical structure, like a bird surveying a landscape from high above; the other is the inside view of an observer living in the world described by the structure, like a frog living in the landscape surveyed by the bird. — Shut up and calculate - Max Tegmark
Wanted to comment on this. Where is Bob in relation to Alice? If outside (non-interacting) with closed Alice system, and if hard single-outcome determinism is true and Bob has access to full state and the resources to make the prediction, then yes, Alice, in the deterministic contained system, can be perfectly predicted and has no ‘predicted outcome’ to reject. Bob cannot divulge the prediction to Alice as that would be interacting, making the system not closed. — noAxioms
OK, so if Bob is within the closed system, there are several reasons, determinism or not, that he cannot make such a prediction. 1: State cannot be known, per Heisenberg uncertainty. 2: Bob cannot predict himself, even if he had this unobtainable state. It would require a mechanism to simulate itself faster than real time. Alice of course would just be waiting for Bob’s prediction, at which point Alice will choose the opposite thing. I can make a small mechanical device with only a couple parts that does that, and Bob will fail to predict its behavior. That doesn’t demonstrate that the device has free will, however you might define it. — noAxioms
Well I kind of agree with you. But you have to accept that Alice in her reference frame has "libertarian" free will, which is not strictly speaking allowed by the known theories of physics. But that's exactly is the problem. How can it "emerge" from either random or deterministic processes? — boundless
I think they can be trivial universes on their own. Does x=1 mean anything that just '1' doesn't? — noAxioms
Well, I'd have to say two kinds of ontology: The structures themselves, which have no ontology, and the things in it (galaxies, cups, photons, gliders) which have a relationship to the structure as a whole. — noAxioms
Well, the relational approach is very interesting in this issue. But again, the outcomes of choices are either random or deterministic (in the "reference frames" of the various agents) and randomness cannot explain free will. — boundless
On the other hand, if we allow the existence of libertarian free will in the case of Alice, maybe we can still assume that in Bob's "reference frame" the choice was inevitable. I wonder if this makes sense (if it does we actually solved the problem of "free will" and omniscence using an interpretation of QM :wink: Sometimes life can be very surprising :rofl: ) — boundless
Wow, a lot of context is missing here. — noAxioms
Looking for inconsistencies in the view. I really like the view since it removes the need for instantiation, which always seems rationalized, and not actually rational, when I see it explained for other views. Cosmological argument for God is such an example. — noAxioms
In relation to the more local observation (the geiger counter and the cat it didn't kill), there is only one outcome, not both. RQM seems to never allow multiple outcomes. — noAxioms
But, let us imagine that O' measures the spin of S, and finds it to have spin down (and note that nothing in the analysis above precludes this from happening). What happens if he talks to O, and they compare the results of their experiments? O, it will be remembered, measured a spin up on the particle. This would appear to be paradoxical: the two observers, surely, will realise that they have disparate results.
However, this apparent paradox only arises as a result of the question being framed incorrectly: as long as we presuppose an "absolute" or "true" state of the world, this would, indeed, present an insurmountable obstacle for the relational interpretation. However, in a fully relational context, there is no way in which the problem can even be coherently expressed. — Relational Quantum Mechanics - Wikipedia
The gliders and such exist as 'physical' parts of that universe. — noAxioms
Yes, that "free will" is certainly possible in determinism. Nobody denies the "phenomenon" of "willing" and that in principle it is possible to choose tea rather than coffee. — boundless
On the other hand, if determinism is true then all my choices are inevitable even if there are different options and if is not forced to choose in a way. — boundless
While I agree that the occurrence of the prediction, and the presentation of its putative content to the agent, take away nothing from the agent's freedom of choice, it must be noted that this setup may make it impossible for the prediction to be successful. That's because if the agent has set up her mind to do the opposite from whatever she is told that she had been predicted to do, then, conditionally on her being presented with the prediction that she would drink tea, say, the predictor will predict that she will drink coffee, and vice versa. So, under those conditions, the prediction, as written down and shown to the agent, can't succeed. — Pierre-Normand
Hence, in the counterfactual scenario, you may choose to deliberately do the opposite of what it is that was "predicted". That's because the "prediction" was effected under the assumption that you would not be informed about its content. — Pierre-Normand
Mainstream compatibilist theories spoil this insight when they attempt to theorize the question of agency (and its internal conceptual link with practical deliberation) from within the theoretical stance and hence reify desires, wants and dispositions as some sorts of psychological forces that determine action. — Pierre-Normand
I always had this problem with "compatibilism". Free will requires that the "choice" is not totally conditioned by the past events whereas determinism implies that when the "initial conditions" are fixed (or better: when the state of the system is fixed at a certain time) then all events are "fixed". — boundless
How does Copenhagen describe the cat in the box then? The cat is in superposition, both dead and alive, despite the measurement being taken from the cat POV. I realize that is a relational description, but I've known no other even before I knew the name for it. — noAxioms
Relational also denies the latter it seems. The other outcomes don't exist in relation to any observation. — noAxioms
Conway game of life is such a structure. Not a physical thing, just formal construct. It does however have physical things in it, with particles that zoom around at varying speeds with casual laws, etc. — noAxioms
In fact what MWI says is that all the possible outcomes occur and at the classical level there is determinism, so IMO it has the same problem of "classical determinism" if what you say is right ;) — boundless
Well yes, I admit you are right and I am defeated :lol: but at the same time the unitary evolution of the Schroedinger equation implies that "all possibilities occur". So FW is incompatilble with MWI (well for that matter is incompatible with all theories in science)... IMO this is one of the reasons why I do not think reality is (only) mathematical, like MWI esplictly holds. At least other interpretations do not go so far. — boundless
Thank you for the insights! — boundless
Wait, how is a collapse-interpretation not unitary? Unitary seems to mean that probabilities of various outcomes of measurements add up to 1. — noAxioms
I always wondered how they detect superposition of say macroscopic states. They put some object (a small bar just large enough to see unaided) into a superposition of vibrating and not. I didn't get from the article how they knew this state had been achieved. — noAxioms
The interpretations with which I am familiar say the photons are both there, in superposition, so long as they've not been measured. It is only after measurement where they differ. Mostly talking about collapse or not interpretations. Copenhagen is mutually exclusive with MWI only in its choice of reality against which the state is defined. If reality is a relation, this is no more contradictory than my location being both north-of and south-of something. Just different things. — noAxioms
If the physical universe is a mathematical structure, and humans are part of it, and not something separate from it but interacting, then humans are 'in' the structure, just like my engine is in my car. How is that a category mistake? — noAxioms
I don't disagree, but this is already stepping into interpretation territory. QM doesn't say what the states actually do. — noAxioms
They can both be correct. The wave function in its simplest form exists in relation to the whole structure of the Schroedinger equation for any closed system, but it exists in collapsed form for any isolated quantum state such as the point of view a human subjective view. These are just different relations, not mutually exclusive interpretations, at least one of which is necessarily wrong. — noAxioms
Yes, it is this unnecessary breathing of fire that I'm talking about. Is such a structure real, in that Platonic sense? Turns out it doesn't matter. The human in the mathematical structure will behave identically, asking the same questions about the same experience, whether or not there is some ontological status to the structure itself. That designation does not in any way alter the structure.
In a way I find myself to be a reverse Platonist. I believed numbers to be real for a while, but now I favor a view that ontic structural realism, where yes, we perhaps share the same ontology as those numbers, not that the numbers must exist, but that the existence of our universe is required much in the same way that numbers don't need it. OSR says we're made of the same stuff, so it presumes the two have the same ontology, but it doesn't presume that shared status must be some kind of objective existence. — noAxioms
Ok, with this I agree. In fact the problem arises with the interpretation of the Schroedinger equation. If you accept it as the "reality", then of course all branches are as real as ours. However, if we accept from the beginning that the wave-function is epistemic and not ontic, then the relation between "potential" and "actual" becomes much more relavant. — boundless
Pusey, Barrett and Rudolph's theorem, which has come to be known as the PBR theorem, essentially offers an ultimatum. If quantum mechanics is right, then the wavefunction cannot be epistemic - it cannot merely represent an experimentalist's partial knowledge about reality. It must instead be ontic and directly correspond either to part of reality (as Bohm said) or to reality in full (as Everett said). — The life of psi - Jon Cartwright
Regarding the "non-scientific reasons"... Well consider ethical responsibility. The reason why we give importance to ethics relies on the fact that we have to choose everytime what to do. We have to make up decisions. With determinism we are completely helpless: we think we have the possibility to choose but in fact we have not that possibility. Every movement and every thought in fact is simply "necessary".
Of course determinism is not the "view" of MWI ... — boundless
I concede that energy conservation is not a problem for MWI, but what about the splitting and consciousness? There is a continuous creation of "subjects" every moment. And here we have a quite inelegant consequence - there is a multiplication of "sentient beings" among other things. — boundless
Also, if it is possible according to MWI that "boundless" commits a crime and we observe he does not, then we know that necessarily another "clone" of "boundless" committed the crime. — boundless
In fact virtue becomes relevant when X can decide to follow it and not to follow "vice". In MWI X follows vice and virtue in two different stories. Both the virtuous and the vicious are "two outcomes" of the wavefunction. . If both choices are a possibility then in two different "worlds" Xs choose both. And the existence of the virtuous X depends on the existence of vicious X. So actually every time all (possibile) good and bad choices are actualized. — boundless
I see what you mean. But at the same time, conflating the "actual" and the "potential" can appear to be inelegant in its way. — boundless
In any case, if this perspective is used then one must accept MUH (Mathemaical Universe Hypothesis). — boundless
Stephen Hawking famously asked "what is it that breathes fire into the equations and makes a universe for them to describe?" In the context of the MUH, there is thus no breathing required, since the point is not that a mathematical structure describes a universe, but that it is a universe. — Max Tegmark - The Mathematical Universe
Since the apple does not appear "red" if we close our eyes, then its colour is not a "property" of the apple itself, but of our perception of it — boundless
Even if we accept "mathematical realism" we can think about different "levels" of reality: the other branches exist potentially, and not actually. I concur that this solution appears inelegant, mathematically. — boundless
Also the idea that "what is mathematical is actually existing" presupposes that (1) our world is no different from a mathematical structure (2) that the mathematics we "use" is a perfect representation of the "actual existing". — boundless
There are several other reasons for my not acceptance of MWI. But in this discussion are quite useless, so I do not write them (unless one is VERY curious and VERY patient to read them, of course ;) ). — boundless
It came to be called ‘the many worlds theory’ because according to it there are an infinite number of universes which allow all possible observations to be realised in one of those universes. — Wayfarer
So, in line with the principle that ‘drastic problems call for drastic solutions’, the question I asked is, if as drastic a solution as ‘many universes’ is warranted, what is the drastic problem that it is responding to? ‘If the many-worlds formulation were found to be impossible in principle, then we would be obliged to accept that: ...’ — Wayfarer
A "potential world" (what we see in our minds as virtual action) does not entail an actual world (the MWI) solution. — Rich
In other words, why was it necessary for Everett to propose an hypotheses comprising the apparently radical speculation of ‘infinitely branching universes’? If it turned out not to be tenable, what would we be obliged to accept? — Wayfarer