Observation is when a scientist looks at the results of an experiment. That has nothing to do with how the experiments takes place or what the results are. — EnPassant
In 1958, Schrödinger, inspired by Schopenhauer from youth, published his lectures Mind and Matter. Here he argued that there is a difference between measuring instruments and human observation: a thermometer’s registration cannot be considered an act of observation, as it contains no meaning in itself. Thus, consciousness is needed to make physical reality meaningful. As Schrödinger concluded, "Some of you, I am sure, will call this mysticism. So with all due acknowledgement to the fact that physical theory is at all times relative, in that it depends on certain basic assumptions, we may, or so I believe, assert that physical theory in its present stage strongly suggests the indestructibility of Mind by Time."
What if you shrunk people down to the size of an electron and used them in the famous "double slit experiment"? Would you get the same results? What would the experiences of the people be? — RogueAI
What if you shrunk people down to the size of an electron and used them in the famous "double slit experiment"? Would you get the same results? What would the experiences of the people be? — RogueAI
What would the experiences of the people be? — RogueAI
Ah, here's the preprint: https://arxiv.org/pdf/1712.07207.pdf — Kenosha Kid
Nice find. Also here's a brief media summary of that paper, aptly titled How does a quantum particle see the world? — Andrew M
It seems to me that even if the apparatus is in superposition in the electron's reference frame, the electron still needs to go through one of the slits which is then effectively an interaction with the apparatus. — Andrew M
But the electron doesn't 'go' in its rest frame, by lieu of a) it's its rest frame and b) its momentum is undefined. (That said, the paper isn't bothered about rest frames as much as un-superposed frames.) At any time, either slits already have a nonzero probability of being behind the electron. — Kenosha Kid
We find that a quantum state and its features — such as superposition and entanglement — are only defined relative to the chosen reference frame, in the spirit of the relational description of physics [16–19, 23, 24]. For example, a quantum system which is in a well-localised state of an observable for a certain observer may, for another observer, be in a superposition of two or more states or even entangled with the first observer. — Quantum mechanics and the covariance of physical laws in quantum reference frames - Giacomini, Castro-Ruiz, Brukner
OK, but the puzzle is to account for what happens when the two apparatus slits go past the electron in the electron's rest frame. — Andrew M
That is, no definite measurement event would ever occur in the electron's reference frame. — Andrew M
If a definite measurement event does occur at the back screen in the electron's reference frame then a definite measurement event should also have occurred at the slit. — Andrew M
This is not an argument from quantum theory, I gather, more a philosophical argument as to how quantum mechanics ought to be. — Kenosha Kid
The double slit experiment suggests that electron collapse at the slit only occurs if we attempt to observe it at the slit, e.g. if we put something in the way of the slit that causes earlier collapse, such as an electron detector. — Kenosha Kid
On a relational view, since an interaction occurs at the slit, collapse occurs in both the electron and apparatus reference frames. — Andrew M
So collapse is reference frame-dependent. — Andrew M
This is analogous to a Wigner's Friend experiment where a definite measurement event occurs in the friend's reference frame but remains in superposition in Wigner's reference frame. — Andrew M
On a relational view, since an interaction occurs at the slit, collapse occurs in both the electron and apparatus reference frames.
— Andrew M
No, the electron is in a fixed state in its frame, that's the point of the paper I linked to — Kenosha Kid
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