There nothing is determined except the evolution of the wavefunction. If we throw a quantum dice, each outcome has still 1/6 chance of appearing. But the process leading to an outcome is simply not there. — Zweistein
Consider a Galton board.What's the heart of the matter? — Zweistein
It seems at the macro-level, at least, the more likely events occur more of the time.
At the scale of the very small, that rule seems violated. — tim wood
So when we throw the dice in reality, what we're looking at is not just the wavefunction of the dice - but the wavefunction of our throw, the wavefunction of the air, the wavefunction of the table, etc. — Hermeticus
Well, I suppose that while your question is addressable, it does not appear to be willing - and perhaps not able - to give an answer anytime soon, if ever. Determinism or randomness may seem at first reasonable to think about as exhaustive of alternatives. After all, of any thing, it either is or is not, no middle. But at the level of the very small, "thing" itself becomes problematic. Waves suggest themselves, though as metaphors. But "where" is a wave? What is "it" "doing" at a "given" "moment"? All these concepts that have already broken down by the time they're applied at the smallest scales. That is, maybe the language of the question is rendered defective in application, a new language needed, and apparently a work in progress since the 1920sThis doesn't address my question though. — Zweistein
If I throw a dice the chance that I throw any of the six numbers is 1/6. The dice rolls determined towards its destined number.
Our lack of knowledge gives rise to chances. If we somehow could know the initial state of the dice and the exact interactions with its environment then the final numbeŕ could be known.
Well, that's the naive argument. In practice, it can't be known in priciple. Which doesn't mean that the process is not determined. It is.
You can say that chance is a subjective feature that we project to, for example, the world of dice. A dice has a 1/6 chance of showing one of the six (if the dice is ideal). — Zweistein
It's a though experiment and not yet possible to actually perform, but the idea is to measure arrival times. — Neoconnerd
Why not possible yet to perform the question. — tim wood
What do you mean? Perform the question? Untill now it's just a thought experiment, like all experiments are first. — Neoconnerd
Anything you yourself can describe in a few well-crafted sentences? — tim wood
What is imprecise about assigning 1 - 6 as possible outcomes of the throw of a die? — tim wood
What does this mean? In words? — Neoconnerd
A deterministic reality behind QM (like van 't Hooft or Bohm suggest and me too) will lead to different trajectories of particles. This results in different arrival times than pure chance gives you. If you start with pure chance calculations and from this result different times are measured, then there is a process behind the chances, as is more reasonable. — Neoconnerd
Are we saying the same thing only you maybe more technically correctly? Or something different?What is imprecise about assigning 1 - 6 as possible outcomes of the throw of a die?
— tim wood
It is imprecise because probability intervals are assigned to outcomes, rather than numbers.
e.g. P ( dice throw = six) = (0,1)
Which only express the fact that throwing a six is possible, but not certain. — sime
Well, that's the naive argument. In practice, it can't be known in priciple. Which doesn't mean that the process is not determined. It is. — Zweistein
Hume's coup de grâce, delivered mid-18th century. I don't know what the fuss is all about! Determinism is predicated on the laws of nature but the laws of nature have no leg to stand on. — TheMadFool
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