Streetlight         
         
Wayfarer         
         
TheWillowOfDarkness         
         
snowleopard         
         
Wayfarer         
         This is why consciousness is irrelevant. We are physical systems no different to other physical systems, which means that physics can teach us something about ourselves and not just things that are 'out there, independent of us'. I don't think you even realise just how horrible this line of thought is for people like you, and just how much this totally and utterly ruins idealist thought. This is the real lesson of QM, and I'm quite glad that you've stumbled across it. — StreetlightX

TheWillowOfDarkness         
         Well, Wheeler says that our participation actually creates the Universe out of the cloud of possibilities. What kind of 'physicalism' is that? — Wayfarer
Streetlight         
         'No phenomenon is a real phenomenon until it is an observed phenomenon'. John Archibald Wheeler — Wayfarer
snowleopard         
         
Streetlight         
         
Wayfarer         
         Observation = measurement = interaction, where our interaction - that of a bunch of moderately clever apes on a small watery rock in the middle of nowhere - is the same as all interaction, everywhere. — StreetlightX
snowleopard         
         It can be there when no-one is looking at it because the concept is of the existing state itself. We are not required for it to be. — TheWillowOfDarkness
      
Streetlight         
         
Andrew M         
         ↪Andrew M Fair enough, I stand corrected. But I still think it’s a legitimate question as to whether any actual ‘registration’ has occurred in the absence of an observer, who in such cases, creates the very machine which records the observation. — Wayfarer
snowleopard         
         
Streetlight         
         
snowleopard         
         
Streetlight         
         Since the device itself is not other than a potential field of possibilities unless an observer is factored in... — snowleopard
frank         
         Well I remain unconvinced ... Since the device itself is not other than a potential field of possibilities unless an observer is factored in, the idea that the device is 'observing' something seems entirely dependent upon the conscious agent that is observing it, — snowleopard
snowleopard         
         This sentence doesn't make any sense. — StreetlightX
snowleopard         
         
Moliere         
         
snowleopard         
         
Streetlight         
         According to QM, is the device not comprised of nothing other than interacting quantum fluctuations in the zero-point field? — snowleopard

snowleopard         
         I'm curious what you mean by 'accounting for consciousness.' — frank
snowleopard         
         QM has nothing to say about what a device 'is' — StreetlightX
Moliere         
         
Streetlight         
         
snowleopard         
         Where is the device in it? — StreetlightX
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.