So a statement like "if I had opened the box at time t I would have found the cat to be dead" could be true even though the laws of nature do not determine that this would have been the outcome? — Michael
So for you, if QM's indeterminism is a falsification of your preference for metaphysical determinism, then you reject QM as an adequate account of nature. The world has to adjust itself so that it conforms to your notion of how to be truth-apt. — apokrisis
Honestly, you are only demanding to be given a "better law of nature" here - one that conforms to your bent for counterfactual definiteness at all times and places.
So for you, if QM's indeterminism is a falsification of your preference for metaphysical determinism, then you reject QM as an adequate account of nature. The world has to adjust itself so that it conforms to your notion of how to be truth-apt.
You started off backwards on this whole issue, and now you are aiming to be as backwards as it could possibly get. — apokrisis
A statement such as:
"if I had opened the box at earlier time t I would have found the cat to be dead"
Can't be given a truth value as it stands. — tom
This is ambiguous. Are you say that it doesn't have a truth value, or only that we can't determine what that truth value is? If the former then we've abandoned the principle of bivalence. If the latter then we need to refer to something other than the laws of nature to explain its truth value. — Michael
This misses the whole point of the example. In context, Peirce was illustrating for his audience that laws of nature are real generals; it had absolutely nothing to do with his "power" to let go of the stone. If it helps, we can change the subjunctive conditional to eliminate that aspect: "If my hand were to disappear magically, then the stone would fall to the ground." — aletheist
No, what makes the first statement true is not some "power" that Peirce has. Rather, it is the fact that there is a real tendency in the universe for things with mass (such as a stone and the earth) to move toward each other in the absence of some intervening object (such as a man's body). — aletheist
No, all I'm saying is that aletheist's solution to the problem of counterfactuals doesn't work. He said that "if X then Y" is true if the laws of nature determine that if X happens then Y will happen. But when it comes to quantum events, the laws of nature don't determine that if X happens then Y will happen; they only determine that if X happens then Y might happen – even if "if X then Y" is true. — Michael
Translating the statement slightly:
"In all the worlds where I opened the box at earlier time t, I discovered the cat to be dead"
Is a false statement. — tom
I'm solving your problem, or rather Modal Realism and Quantum Mechanics are independently solving your problem, and many other problems. — tom
This is ambiguous. Are you say that it doesn't have a truth value, or only that we can't determine what that truth value is? If the former then we've abandoned the principle of bivalence. If the latter then we need to refer to something other than the laws of nature to explain its truth value. — Michael
You're not solving the problem. You haven't explained how the statement ""if I had opened the box at earlier time t I would have found the cat to be dead" can have a bivalent truth value.
All you're explaining is how different statements can have a bivalent truth value. But that's a red herring. — Michael
The clue is in the Modal Realism and the Quantum Mechanics.
If the statement agrees with the laws of physics, it is true - there is a world in which it is a fact. You might not be in that world, so for you the truth would be counterfactual.
If we are to accept imprecise statements as having a truth-value in the spirit of brevity and in full knowledge that we each are sufficiently versed in QM, so that we can assume each others meaning, then your statement is true, and has a single truth-value. — tom
Under unitary quantum mechanics, the statement, "if I had opened the box at earlier time t I would have found the cat to be dead" doesn't have a truth value because it doesn't unambiguously pick out a specific branch of the wave function. — Andrew M
No, we have to abandon the idea that the statement meaningfully refers to something. Suppose I was speaking to a crowd of people and I said, "You have a red shirt." That statement lacks a truth value unless I'm addressing a specific person.
The problem is not the principle of bivalence, it's the presence of ambiguity. — Andrew M
How can the laws of nature be "real generals" when something so simple as gravity can be understood in these two opposing ways? — Metaphysician Undercover
Now the law, the so-called "real general", only applies in these instances of artificial separation. This real general doesn't apply to naturally occurring situations at all. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, all I'm saying is that aletheist's solution to the problem of counterfactuals doesn't work. He said that "if X then Y" is true if the laws of nature determine that if X happens then Y will happen. — Michael
Suppose I was speaking to a crowd of people and I said, "You have a red shirt." That statement lacks a truth value unless I'm addressing a specific person. — Andrew M
Does it, though? What if ten people in the crowd had a red shirt? Does the statement fail to refer to them?
I've certainly listened to speakers use a general you to address some people in the crowd.
Maybe the problem is expecting that ordinary language propositions necessarily rely on bivalence. In the case of QM, the truth value can depend on which branch, if one adopts MWI. — Marchesk
On this view, there can be no fact about what would have happened to you (singular) if you had opened the Schrodinger's Cat box at an earlier time. — Andrew M
know Schrodinger's point was that it was ridiculous to think the cat would be in a superposed state of alive and dead before we look, but a lot of people have taken it to mean the opposite. — Marchesk
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