So there is no such thing as thinking of "wave forms as opposed to particles" because a wave form is a form that a group of particles has. — Metaphysician Undercover
How could there be a wave form without points and boundaries? — Metaphysician Undercover
The problem is that there is no longer any such thing as a particle. What we have is a wave that manifests itself in different ways depending upon how it is being observed. But quite literally particles no longer exist as a reasonable description of nature. Wave fields are closer: — Rich
Waves are the best metaphor to understand particles and fields. — Rich
ou seem to be missing the point, "wave" refers to an activity of particles, so it makes no sense to say there is no particles, only waves, because a wave is composed of particles, usually moving molecules. — Metaphysician Undercover
Notice the word "metaphor" here? Like I said, you are taking things which are wave-like, then trying to produce a definition of "wave" from these wave-like things. So you produce a definition of "wave" which doesn't require the wave to be a movement of particles. But this is nonsense because "wave" is used here as a metaphor, and you are trying to say that this metaphorical use of "wave" refers to a real wave. — Metaphysician Undercover
Better represented would be there measurement of a what appears to be a particle is a manifestation of the experiment. A wave in the ocean may strike a rock and one may only perceive the strike on the rock (the perturbation), but that specific observation is a reflection of what the observer was looking at at. Had the observer shifted his gaze, he would see the complete wave. No particles anywhere it is all waves. Particles are remnants of some (not all) ancient philosophies. — Rich
Actually the worst possible metaphor, which is entirely anachronistic is the one you are using, that is a billiard ball-like particle. No such animal anywhere in modern physics though apparently the idea still persists in academic philosophy. — Rich
I have no idea why you keep insisting on particles. Such a notion is antiquated though unfortunately it is still part of some science curriculums. — Rich
You don't believe that the water consists of molecules of H2O? And do you not believe that the wave is an activity of these molecules? — Metaphysician Undercover
I figure you'd be back trying to save particles. — Rich
Bohm's causal model says the probabilistic quantum potential field is very, very real, and propagates through distance and effects through form. — Rich
OK, now that we have obliterated separation between electrons, protons, neutrons in a single molecule, you want me to show you how separation is obliterated between molecules.
Ok, look at the molecule. That is how multiple molecules will look with differing amplitudes. BTW, non-locality and entanglement has been laboratory demonstrated at the molecular level. — Rich
For whatever reason you need to hold on the anachronistic particle view of the world, so hold on to it. When you are ready to change then change. My guess is that you have some matter-mind philosophy which is dependent upon particles. — Rich
point being that if there is no separation between molecules then a wave is impossible. Clearly the separation has not been obliterated or else waves would have been obliterated as well. — Metaphysician Undercover
including one if the great geniuses of modern physics — Rich
Sure, Bohm produced both good science and crackpot ideas — apokrisis
No. It is a universal. It is the fabric. Imagine the ocean as the universe with waves and waves everywhere. First you must be able to imagine it. Right now, all you can imagine are billiard balls. — Rich
There cannot be a discussion until you can imagine otherwise. — Rich
I agree MU makes the same mistake in complementary fashion. He thinks physicists really might believe fundamental particles to be dinky spherical objects. — apokrisis
Unless you can explain to me how the waves in the ocean can exist other than as an activity of the water molecules, it is pointless for you to ask me to try to imagine such a thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
But you have been arguing for an actual material field. — apokrisis
The boundary is a cloud. There is no hard boundary though there is a continuum of substantiality. Physicists have acknowledged this in their research of particles. In fact, everything seems to be connected, even non-locally. Daoists arrived at the same idea but observing the macro and how everything flows from one to the other. I flow directly into the rest of the universe. — Rich
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