1. What determines a measurement? Even molecules can exhibit the same behavior that electrons and photons do in the double-slit experiments. — Marchesk
4. Do normal, macro-scale objects exist when we're not "looking"? I recall reading that Bohr and Einstein debated whether the moon was still there when they turned their backs. Bohr, being the champion of the Copenhagen Interpretation, argued it was just a range of possible states. — Marchesk
1. What determines a measurement? Even molecules can exhibit the same behavior that electrons and photons do in the double-slit experiments. — Marchesk
2. How does a quantum property transition from possibility to a single value? This would be the issue of the so-called wave function collapse. — Marchesk
3. Why is the probability distribution wave-like? If it's not real, then how does the math work out? What makes the wavefunction descriptive? How are mere possibilities interfering, cohering, entangling, etc? — Marchesk
4. Do normal, macro-scale objects exist when we're not "looking"? I recall reading that Bohr and Einstein debated whether the moon was still there when they turned their backs. Bohr, being the champion of the Copenhagen Interpretation, argued it was just a range of possible states. — Marchesk
5. Early enough in the universe, everything would have been on the scale of subatomic particles, so how did the macro-scale universe where measurements take place come to exist? If the Copenhagen interpretation is correct, then the early Big Bang was just a probability space, not something real. Does that mean a measurement took place? — Marchesk
6. Does gravity have a wavefunction? Is mass only discrete when measured? What would the implication of that be for GR? — Marchesk
Gravity? You mean space-time curvature I hope, and no, space-time is real. — tom
Your other questions are meaningless. Shut up and calculate instead. If you don't like being told what to do, tough! Probabilities are normative. — tom
Yeah, but part of science is asking why phenomena appears the way it does. What's going on behind the scenes? Imagine if Newton and Einstein had stopped at an equation for gravity and told everyone to shut up about the reality behind the equation. — Marchesk
The related concern is why should Schrodinger's equation work at all? Just saying that it fits experimental data is no answer at all. I was watching a video last night where Brian Green brought in four people to discuss the various interpretations of QM. One of them summed up the measurement problem as asking the question: what sort of world do we live in to get the sort of results that the double slit experiment gives us? — Marchesk
Gravitons, I would presume. And space has quantum foam, where virtual particles pop in and out of existence, creating energy that supplies most of the mass for particles. — Marchesk
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