The whole point your long and detailed answer skips over is the 'm' in mwi. — Wayfarer
The instrinsically grotesque nature of there being 'many worlds' is skipped over by the advocates; like, the strangeness of the idea that we're all part of an infinite 'hall of mirrors' is being skipped over, on account of the fact that it is 'mathematically convenient'. Don't you see how strange that is? — Wayfarer
This has been an instructive debate. — Wayfarer
You're claiming that the only possible starting point for meaningful discussion, is the premise that things exist in the intuitive, common sense notion of "things exist". And you want to maintain this premise, while introducing the QM premise that things do not "have a precise position and momentum at the same time". Do you not see that this QM premise contradicts the common sense notion of "exists"? When there is contradiction, we have an either-or situation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you AndrewM, recognize that there is a fundamental incompatibility between the premise that there is just one continuity, and the premise that there is multiple continuities? These two premises are incompatible, contradictory. — Metaphysician Undercover
Rather than getting upset, show that you understand what you are talking about. — Apokrisis
You seem to think that the interference pattern is caused by some kind of dependency of one outcome on all the others. It is the particles that are all physically interfering with each others statistics in some kind of spooky, nonlocal, time and space defying, fashion. — Apokrisis
It doesn't contradict it. This just comes down to Wittgenstein's private language argument which, as I recall, you reject.
The term "existence" has a public referent. We point to an apple and say that that is what we mean by something existing. Even though we update our knowledge about apples from time to time, we are still referring to the same ordinary, familiar, existing apples that we were before. — Andrew M
My apple, at the moment, may have a well-defined position. So it therefore will be in a superposition of momenta. This just means it's not a classical object, it's a quantum object. — Andrew M
But such caveats aside, there is no particle travelling through the apparatus. Instead there is an evolving wave of probability of detecting a particle that reflects the shape of the apparatus. If there are two slits that the wave has to pass through, then it "goes through both" and you get the resulting wave-like interference effect. — apokrisis
Well you are wrong. It is an important point that the particle "goes both ways" even if it was a one-off, never to be repeated, experiment. — apokrisis
What I was told on Physics Forum, is whether the particles are fired one at at time, or whether they are fired altogether, the end result is the same. So I am saying, it can't really be a result of 'interference', can it? — Wayfarer
So are you saying the two paths of an individual quantum event don't interfere due to superposition? — Apokrisis
One of the well-known problems of the double-slit experiment is that particles fired singly seem to act as though interference is happening. But how can interference occur when there's only one particle? It's one of the notorious difficulties of quantum mechanics. So I'm not saying 'they don't interfere due to superposition'; I'm saying that what appears as 'an interference pattern' isn't really interference at all - where it would be exactly that is if it really were water waves or sound waves. — Wayfarer
The 'waves', so called, really are probability distributions, not actual 'waves' at all. The equation models both them and material waves, but they're of a different nature to waves in water, because there's no medium. They're not really waves, in the same sense, and for the same reason, that electrons are not really particles. — Wayfarer
Now the reason I say that is compatible with the Copenhagen Interpretation is that there are many statements along similar lines from them: 'What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning', said Heisenberg. Whereas, Einstein wanted to insist that there were something objectively real and (crucially), 'mind-independent', of which QM was an incomplete description. — Wayfarer
your posts here were making some kind of deal out of interference patterns not being rate-dependent. — Apokrisis
there is little point trying to apply some simplistic and materialistic understanding of the word "interference" here. — Apokrisis
Do you get the complementarity principle? Is one description right and the other wrong? Or are both a reflection of some chosen measurement basis? — apokrisis
So, it is analogous to the interference of waves in a medium, but here there isn't a medium! So the reason it is perplexing is because, there are waves, but nothing for the waves to be 'in'. The 'waves', so called, really are probability distributions, not actual 'waves' at all. — Wayfarer
A relevant guest post on Sean Carroll's blog by philosopher David Wallace: On the Physicality of the Quantum State — SophistiCat
How do you arrive at an explanatory scientific theory other than by inductive reasoning? — mcdoodle
I find it solipsistic and incomprehensible to view every entity existing in a multiplicity of states in the multiverse. Doesn't one wavefunction entail another or do these wavefunctions exist/evolve independently? — Question
To say, as you did, 'there is no particle travelling through the apparatus" is to say that there is no object called "the particle" to which the complementarity principle may be applied. — Metaphysician Undercover
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