Symmetry — apokrisis
What's the relationship, if any, between the geometric symmetries mentioned above and Noether symmetry? — Agent Smith
Modulo the potential loopholes and accepting the photons’ status as observers, the violation of inequality (2) implies that at least one of the three assumptions of free choice, locality, and observer-independent facts must fail. The related no-go theorem by Frauchiger and Renner (5) rests on different assumptions, which do not explicitly include locality. While the precise interpretation of (5) within nonlocal theories is under debate (21), it seems that abandoning free choice and locality might not resolve the contradiction (5). A compelling way to accommodate our result is then to proclaim that facts of the world can only be established by a privileged observer—e.g., one that would have access to the “global wavefunction” in the many worlds interpretation (22) or Bohmian mechanics (23). Another option is to give up observer independence completely by considering facts only relative to observers (24), or by adopting an interpretation such as QBism, where quantum mechanics is just a tool that captures an agent’s subjective prediction of future measurement outcomes (25). This choice, however, requires us to embrace the possibility that different observers irreconcilably disagree about what happened in an experiment. A further interesting question is whether the conclusions drawn from Bell or Bell-Wigner tests change under relativistic conditions with non-inertial observers (26).
Noether symmetries are continuous transformations,the transformations being temporal translations. — Agent Smith
Nope, didn't mean non-locality for contextuality, although some people do claim that non-locality demonstrates contextuality because ones observers' observations effect another's in such a baffling way. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I was thinking of more recent Bell-Wigner experiments, instead of just testing Bell inequalities. Because the difference is that assuming non-locality might not be enough to get rid of the lack of an objective world where all observers can reconcile their recorded facts. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Sounds like you’re done with the easy globally continuous stuff and are raring to go with the local discrete stuff. Bring on gauge symmetry and how it generates particle physics. :grin: — apokrisis
How can everything not? — 180 Proof
The past is never dead. It's not even past." — William Faulkner
Aristotle was talking out of his ass and the conclusion derived from his ass makes as much sense as a turd on a plate. — 180 Proof
The past doesn't exist, it's gone; the future too doesn't exist, it is yet to come; the now is an instant, it is nothing! Existence is an activity, and like all activities, requires a non-zero length of time. How can anything exist? — Agent Smith
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