The results were witnessed. — creativesoul
We did not arrive at causality by virtue of inventing and/or imagining it. We arrived at causality by virtue of witnessing it happen... over and over and over again... — creativesoul
Math doesn't do anything observable...The results of different experiments began a race to explanation. — creativesoul
Which uses maths to account for anomalous observations... — Wayfarer
To conclude that quantum mechanics operates on a more fundamental level is very questionable. It becomes apparent that that is gravely mistaken if and/or when we continue on to say that randomness is fundamental in it's relationship with causality. — creativesoul
If it were the case that randomness is more fundamental then we would need to ignore overwhelming fractal evidence to the contrary in order to sincerely assert this. Fractals are patterns. Pattern cannot happen without sequences of events. Sequence cannot happen without predictable time increments. — creativesoul
Pure randomness has no predictable sequence. Randomness falls well short of the mark. It cannot produce what we do witness. — creativesoul
Here's my take...
When observable entities are smaller than a planck length and the act of observing them includes shining light on them then the observation itself begins a causal chain of events as a result of the mass of the photon influencing the path(location) and movement speed(acceleration) of the subatomic particle being observed. — creativesoul
As far as I know, retrocausality isn't ''possible''. — TheMadFool
The data revealed the existence of quantum correlations between ‘temporally nonlocal’ photons 1 and 4. That is, entanglement can occur across two quantum systems that never coexisted.
What on Earth can this mean? Prima facie, it seems as troubling as saying that the polarity of starlight in the far-distant past – say, greater than twice Earth’s lifetime – nevertheless influenced the polarity of starlight falling through your amateur telescope this winter. Even more bizarrely: maybe it implies that the measurements carried out by your eye upon starlight falling through your telescope this winter somehow dictated the polarity of photons more than 9 billion years old.
https://aeon.co/ideas/you-thought-quantum-mechanics-was-weird-check-out-entangled-time
Your effort to measure a system becomes so strenuous that at some point it produces such an energy density that the whole region of spacetime is going to collapse into a black hole. — apokrisis
...especially dissipative thermodynamical ones, such as river branching and coastline erosion... — apokrisis
But I tried to make clear that I am talking about retrocausality only in terms of backwards-acting constraints on probabilities. The future can determine the past to the extent that future experimental choices will limit the statistics of some past process. So the future doesn't produce the event in a determining fashion. It just affects the shape of the probability that existed back then. — apokrisis
A model of our invention is not something that causality can be.
I would warn here against conflating a report(conception if you prefer) of something with that something. — creativesoul
If QM can undermine causality, — Harry Hindu
Yep, so you are making some confused epistemic point about our models of reality. — apokrisis
But that kind of realism is still a presumption, even it it seems pretty reasonable. — apokrisis
Here's my take... — creativesoul
Math doesn't do anything observable. It's a tool of measurement. Quantum mechanics is math. Quantum mechanics is understood if someone understands the formulas, principles, and rules of doing it. — creativesoul
The discomfort that I feel is associated with the fact that the observed perfect quantum correlations seem to demand something like the "genetic" hypothesis. For me, it is so reasonable to assume that the photons in those experiments carry with them programs, which have been correlated in advance, telling them how to behave. This is so rational that I think that when Einstein saw that, and the others refused to see it, he was the rational man. The other people, although history has justified them, were burying their heads in the sand. I feel that Einstein's intellectual superiority over Bohr, in this instance, was enormous; a vast gulf between the man who saw clearly what was needed, and the obscurantist. So for me, it is a pity that Einstein's idea doesn't work. The reasonable thing just doesn't work.
I'm pointing out the inherent conflation in your position, namely that you're not drawing the distinction between your report and what's being reported upon(causality, in this case). — creativesoul
To hold that QM is the basis of causality is asinine. — creativesoul
What I was taking issue with was the first sentence: that maths doesn't do anything observable. It makes predictions, which are then validated against observation. So maybe pure maths doesn't 'do anything observable', but mathematical physics does a great deal. — Wayfarer
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