What I think you mean is that one of the theory's predictions can not be tested (that there are many worlds), at least at this point. — Andrew M
I don't think 'the Copenhagen interpretation' is, or attempts to be, a scientific hypothesis. It is just a collection of aphorisms and philosophical reflections, principally by Bohr and Heisenberg, which are about what you can and can't say on the basis of the discoveries of quantum mechanics. — Wayfarer
So, according to the article, the notion of objective reality has not been unequivocally undermined, as your headline asserts. It might be the notion of freedom of choice or the idea of locality which have been undermined; the article only claims that it must be that one of the three is wrong. — Janus
Agree. MWI says there is an objective reality, but it is entirely in superposition, and measurement just entangles the measurer with the measured thing. It does not collapse any wave function. Hence there is no defined state of anything (like dead cat), and hence no counterfactual (or even factual) definiteness. — noAxioms
I haven't read the paper yet, but I did a search for references to it on physicsforums and found nothing, including in more than one recent discussion on the Wigner's Friend thought experiment. So I suspect the experiment doesn't say what the MIT article claims it says. To have a situation where two observers can obtain contradictory measurements, rather than just measurements with differing levels of detail, would be too epoch-making to ignore. — andrewk
The scientific method relies on facts, established through repeated measurements and agreed upon universally, independently of who observed them. In quantum mechanics, the objectivity of observations is not so clear, most dramatically exposed in Eugene Wigner's eponymous thought experiment where two observers can experience fundamentally different realities. While observer-independence has long remained inaccessible to empirical investigation, recent no-go-theorems construct an extended Wigner's friend scenario with four entangled observers that allows us to put it to the test. In a state-of-the-art 6-photon experiment, we here realise this extended Wigner's friend scenario, experimentally violating the associated Bell-type inequality by 5 standard deviations. This result lends considerable strength to interpretations of quantum theory already set in an observer-dependent framework and demands for revision of those which are not.
No interpretation is a cop out, but MWI cannot have those observers in different world branches since they communicate. Alice knows the polarity and tells Bob that she does. Bob knows that the particle is still in superposition and tells Alice so. That cannot happen if the two are in different branches.
— noAxioms
In the experiment, Alice can communicate to Bob that she has measured a definite polarity (without the polarity itself being revealed) while the lab she is in remains isolated (and Bob does not communicate back, which would presumably constitute a measurement entangling him with Alice). So there are actually three MWI branches here. One where Alice measures a horizontal polarization, one where she measures a vertical polarization, and one that is the superposition of those two branches where Bob detects interference (and knows that Alice has made a measurement). — Andrew M
I actually don't know the terminology that well, in particular 'factorization'.BTW, I believe that other than the very problematic concept of 'many worlds', MWI has a serious problem, check: https://arxiv.org/abs/1210.8447 . The usual claim that the 'preferred basis problem' is solved by decoherence. But it is not correct. Decoherence solves the 'preferred basis problem' (in fact, 'for all practical purposes' in my feeble understanding) only if you already assume that there is a well-defined factorization in the Hilbert space (which is the only 'reality' in MWI, AFAIK). Without well defined subsystems, the factorization is completely arbitrary (also, it should be added that, in fact, one has no, a priori, reasons to do a factorization in the first place).
I do not know how MWI-supporters handles this in a non-circular way. — boundless
I'm an RQM guy myself, and yes, nothing is just 'real', things are only real in relation to something else, so how can the universal wave be real when there is nothing to which it is real in relation? The view would be self inconsistent if it were to be otherwise.I also add that MWI and RQM are close. The difference being that RQM does not accept the reality of the 'universal wavefunction' because, in RQM, wave-functions are well-defined in relation to a specific physical system (the 'observer' in this interpretation).
Close. It isn't philosophy at all. The 'interpretation', unlike other philosophical interpretations of QM, is just a scientific statement concerning what is known about a system. Hence it is, as far as Bohr, Heisenberg, and Schrodinger are concerned, just an epistemological statement, not a metaphysical interpretation. There are plenty who take that epistemological wording also as some kind of statement of reality, but Copenhagen was not intended to be used this way.I don't think 'the Copenhagen interpretation' is, or attempts to be, a scientific hypothesis. It is just a collection of aphorisms and philosophical reflections, principally by Bohr and Heisenberg, which are about what you can and can't say on the basis of the discoveries of quantum mechanics. — Wayfarer
↪fdrake Indeed - I think that is very much the kind of understanding that has emerged from science in the last several decades. But I think it sits oddly alongside what you said previously. — Wayfarer
Notice that Bohr says that ‘the objective world of nineteenth century science’ has become untenable. I think he’s correct in saying that, but isn’t it very much the substance of his disagreements with Einstein? — Wayfarer
I actually don't know the terminology that well, in particular 'factorization'. — noAxioms
I'm an RQM guy myself, and yes, nothing is just 'real', things are only real in relation to something else, so how can the universal wave be real when there is nothing to which it is real in relation? The view would be self inconsistent if it were to be otherwise. — noAxioms
Nonetheless, the main problem with this view is that if the wave-function is considered to be information or a 'mathematical tool' (as in my understanding Rovelli does), then it is difficult to understand how we can speak of 'information' related to a non-conscious observer. This is, in fact, Michel Bitbol's point. — boundless
consciousness?’ because natural objects and properties are not intrinsically identifiable ; they are identifiable only in relation to the ‘conceptual imputations’ of intersubjective experience." — Joshs
Wigner can even perform an experiment to determine whether this superposition exists or not. This is a kind of interference experiment showing that the photon and the measurement are indeed in a superposition. — technology review
The trick is then in giving an immanent account of 'perspectival' dependence without making humans a necessary constituent of nature. — fdrake
Information and probability are dual notions; wherever you have a probability distribution you have an entropy. The connection between the two is particularly intimate for discrete random variables - like when there is a given probability of being in one of countably many eigenstates of an operator. Quantum entropy measures the degree of mixing in a state; how close it is to behaving in a singular eigenstate (unless I'm misinterpreting, I am both rusty and mostly uneducated here). Information measures are derivable from probability distributions, but the process of mapping a distribution to an entropy value is not invertible - so the two notions can't be taken as inter-definable. As in, if you have an entropy, you have a single number, which could be generated from lots of different quantum states and probability distributions.
I'm sure there are problems, but I think there are good reasons to believe that information is just as much a part of nature as wave functions. — fdrake
Also, I use information theory in its information-theory meaning (Shannon): information is a measure of the number of states in which a system can be – or in which several systems whose states are physically constrained (correlated) can be. Thus, a pen on my table has information because it points in this or that direction. We do not need a human being, a cat, or a computer, to make use of this notion of information.
The wiki table on interpretations lists Copenhagen as a non-local interpretation, and I don't understand that. My knowledge of a system doesn't change due to an event that happens elsewhere. But I suppose that my knowledge of a distant system (like the distant half of an entangled pair) changes immediately upon my measurement of its local sibling, so maybe that's why they list it as a non-local interpretation. — noAxioms
As I said, however, Bitbol does not claim that we 'create' reality. Rather the situation here is much like in Kant. We cannot know how reality is independently from our perspective. We just cannot 'neglect' it completely. Why? Because, conscious experience is the starting point of all inquiry. — boundless
What we get right or wrong, true or false , only makes sense in relation to our changing theoretical norms — Joshs
When asked the question; what does your knowledge and experience consist of? You may say it consists of interpretations. What of the things we experience in the world? Those too are interpretations with a certain thingliness associated with them. Whenever we interact with anything, all that is generated is an interpretation, and all thought consists in a chain of such interpretations evaluated with a logic of links you might call a theory
We said above that, since Kant, objectivity is no longer defined with reference to the object in itself (in terms of the statement’s adequation or resemblance to what it designates), but rather with reference to the possible universality of an objective statement. “It is the intersubjectivity of the ancestral statement – the fact that it should by right be verifiable by any member of the scientific community – that guarantees its objectivity, and hence its ‘truth’. It cannot be anything else, since its referent, taken literally, is unthinkable — Meillassoux, After Finitude Chapter 1, Ancestrality
Consider the following ancestral statement: ‘Event Y occurred x number of years before the emergence of humans.’ The correlationist philosopher will in no way intervene in the content of this statement: she will not contest the claim that it is in fact event Y that occurred, nor will she contest the dating of this event. No – she will simply add – perhaps only to himself, but add it he will – something like a simple codicil, always the same one, which he will discretely append to the end of the phrase: event Y occurred x number of years before the emergence of humans – for humans (or even, for the human scientist). This codicil is the codicil of modernity: the codicil through which the modern philosopher refrains (or at least thinks she does) from intervening in the content of science, while preserving a regime of meaning external to and more originary than that of science. Accordingly, when confronted with an ancestral statement, correlationism postulates that there are at least two levels of meaning in such a statement: the immediate, or realist meaning; and the more originary correlationist meaning, activated by the codicil.
We would then be obliged to maintain what can only appear to the post-critical philosopher as a tissue of absurdities; to wit (and the list is not exhaustive):
• that being is not co-extensive with manifestation, since events have occurred in the past which were not manifest to anyone;
• that what is preceded in time the manifestation of what is;
• that manifestation itself emerged in time and space, and that consequently manifestation is not the givenness of a world, but rather an intra-worldly occurrence;
• that this event can, moreover, be dated;
• that thought is in a position to think manifestation’s emergence in being, as well as a being or a time anterior to manifestation;
-that the fossil-matter (the state of affairs pictured in the statement 'the universe is 13.8 billion years old') is the givenness in the present of a being that is anterior to givenness; that is to say, that an arche-fossil manifests an entity’s anteriority vis-à-vis manifestation.
There is a wave function of places where I likely left my car keys, with some more probable than others. When I find them (or even when I look certain places and don't yet find them), that wave function changes since my knowledge of the system has been changed. — noAxioms
* that being is not co-extensive with manifestation, since events have occurred in the past which were not manifest to anyone — fdrake
The quasar could be very distant from Earth, with light so faint that its photons hit the piece of film only one at a time. But the results of the experiment wouldn't change. The striped pattern would still show up, meaning that a lone photon not observed by the telescope traveled both paths toward Earth, even if those paths were separated by many light-years. And that's not all.
By the time the astronomers decide which measurement to make — whether to pin down the photon to one definite route or to have it follow both paths simultaneously — the photon could have already journeyed for billions of years, long before life appeared on Earth. The measurements made now, says Wheeler, determine the photon's past. In one case the astronomers create a past in which a photon took both possible routes from the quasar to Earth.
'The universe is 13.8 billion years old', I'm actually believing in its literal truth, and not the correlationist transformation of the statement; 'The universe is 13.8 billion years old for us/our current theories/whatever'. Moreover, though I have given no argument of this, I believe that the ability to accept the literal truth of that statement and moreover that it has a meaning at all are indicative that thought really can 'aim for that which is outside of it', and that our inquiries are meaningful only when they can admit the possibility of nature 'Shouting no!'. — fdrake
I understand by the transcendental idealism of all appearances the doctrine that they are all together to be regarded as mere representations and not things in themselves, and accordingly that space and time are only sensible forms of our intuition, but not determinations given for themselves or conditions of objects as things in themselves. To this idealism is opposed transcendental realism, which regards space and time as something given in themselves (independent of our sensiblity). The transcendental realist therefore represents outer appearances (if their reality is conceded) as things in themselves, which would exist independently of us and our sensibility and thus would also be outside us according to pure concepts of the understanding. (CPR, A369)
The transcendental idealist, however, can be an empirical realist, hence, as he is called, a dualist, i.e., he can concede the existence of matter without going beyond mere self-consciousness and assuming something more than the certainty of representations in me, hence the cogito ergo sum. For because he allows this matter and even its inner possibility to be valid only for appearance– which, separated from our sensibility, is nothing – matter for him is only a species of representations (intuition), which are called 'external', not as if they related to objects that are external in themselves but because they relate perceptions to space, where all things are external to one another, but that space itself is in us. (A370)
It's not so much 'correlationism' as the incorrigible realism that each of us is born with. What you're not seeing is the role the mind/brain plays in the statement about the age of the Universe (or anything else, for that matter.) But what this assumes is just what Kant means by 'transcendental realism': — Wayfarer
For because he allows this matter and even its inner possibility to be valid only for appearance– which, separated from our sensibility, is nothing – matter for him is only a species of representations (intuition), which are called 'external', not as if they related to objects that are external in themselves but because they relate perceptions to space, where all things are external to one another, but that space itself is in us. (A370)
The problem is, empiricism has bet the house on the fact that what it conceives of as nature, the real world, and so on, is what is finally and fundamentally real. But QM continues to throw this into doubt. Hence the controversy! — Wayfarer
It still describes some natural phenomenon. — fdrake
But you go further when you speak of systems as if they're observers. — Wayfarer
That is my understanding. And the abstract of the paper doesn't say a superposition is detected. I suspect there is some over-interpretation of the experiment's implications going on here.how can you "measure" a superposition or how can a measurement be in a superposition? I thought any observation causes the wave function to collapse in a single eigenstate and a measurement, I would think, involves an observation. — Benkei
At the risk of being annoyingly meta, I think there are multiple interpretations possible of the many-worlds interpretation of QM.Anyway, point is, Alice learning of the measurement results splits Alice, but does not split the universe, as is commonly assumed. Bob, being able to speak to both versions of Alice, is still in a common world. So yes to the three worlds if you count them that way: One for each Alice, and one for Bob. — noAxioms
Those two version of Alice, being in different worlds, cannot communicate or otherwise be aware of each other. But they behave exactly identically because they're keeping that knowledge a secret. — noAxioms
Anyway, point is, Alice learning of the measurement results splits Alice, but does not split the universe, as is commonly assumed. — noAxioms
So yes to the three worlds if you count them that way: One for each Alice, and one for Bob. But there is obviously communication between the Bob world and both Alice worlds, but Bob cannot pass a message from one Alice to the other. With the communication, Bob's world is clearly not isolated from Alice's world, and hence doesn't really count as a separate world. — noAxioms
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