My comments pretty much reflect the Everett interpretation, and not DeWitt's. Both are grouped under the same heading in the wiki list, but you point out some critical differences between the two.I think it's important too to differentiate between Everett's Interpretation and MWI, as first put forth by DeWitt. — i aM
Without interaction, there would be no interference. Seems a view that asserts lack of interaction can be falsified. I suppose they get around that by saying that superposition states are not different worlds interacting, but rather just one in that state, to be metaphysically separated at measurement time. There are experiments that demonstrate otherwise.I'm not sure why, in MWI, the separate branches are said to not be able to interact with one another.
Exactly so. That's why it is called the theory of relativity and not the theory of objectivity. It's only a problem if you add that additional premise as you are doing.The problem is that to say that the ordering is dependent on perspective means that there is no objective truth with respect to the order. — Metaphysician Undercover
In the context of QM, consider that the wave-function is analogous to the potential of energy (capacity to work). It must remain constant, continuous, as time passes, according to conservation laws. Then there is a so-called collapse of the wave-function, and this is analogous to actual work being done, a potential being actualized. We cannot relate these two because "actual work being done" would remove potential and violate the conservation law. So we have a gap between the potential, which must always remain constant according to conservation laws, and the "actualizing of a potential", which would remove some of that potential placing it into a different category of "actual", thus violating the conservation law. — Metaphysician Undercover
Exactly so. That's why it is called the theory of relativity and not the theory of objectivity. It's only a problem if you add that additional premise as you are doing. — noAxioms
I didn't really understand most of what you wrote, so I will just try to focus on this passage. What you seem to be ignoring is entropy; which is the continual dissipation of the capacity of energy to do any work, which in theory culminates in so-called 'heat death' the total absence of any potential for energy to do any work. Remember that matter and energy are equivalents, and the form of energy only obtains provided there are differentials in potential which allow energy to "flow'. — Janus
idk, by my understanding decoherence would render interaction between specific separate branches highly improbable. But because there are SO MANY separate branches, it would happen regularly. Sorta like what happens with quantum tunneling. — i aM
Sure, absolutely. I'm not querying whether fields are real or the effectiveness of field theory. The point I was taking issue with was 'Particles are what we see. Fields are what reality is made of.' — Wayfarer
"In the same sense" means using the words in the same way. It has nothing to do with reference frames unless "temporal order" has a different meaning from one reference frame to the next. — Metaphysician Undercover
So a field would be the property of something because there needs to be something actual which has that potential For example an electromagnetic field is a property of an object. — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, more or less I always understood RQM in that way! :smile: ... After my dialogue with noAxioms, I am not sure about it. In fact, the 'relativization' of existence makes perfect sense in RQM. For each 'Alice' (each 'Wigner's friend') the other(s) cannot be said to 'exist'. — boundless
But unless one adds a selection postulate, I believe that before the measurement 'Alice'/'Wigner's friend' can safely say that all 'Alice-s'/'Wigner's friends' will remember 'her'/'him'. What do you think? — boundless
So what Carroll means is that fields are fundamental and particles (and everyday things generally) emerge from the interaction of those underlying fields.
Or, as Wikipedia puts it, "QFT treats particles as excited states (also called quanta) of their underlying fields, which are—in a sense—more fundamental than the basic particles." — Andrew M
Now consider the train-and-platform scenario (including the two traincar pictures). Per special relativity, the statement "The light reached the front and back of the traincar simultaneously" is true for an observer on the moving traincar while false for an observer on the train platform. — Andrew M
And that's not the way it's modeled in QFT. In QFT, objects (including particles) emerge from the interactions of more fundamental fields. That is, the existence of the object is dependent on the existence of the fields. — Andrew M
Matter exists, but the mathematics underneath seem more fundamental. — noAxioms
I agree. But that interpretation of RQM would only be a semantic difference from MWI, not a substantial one. My understanding is that RQM is a more abstract interpretation that captures what Rovelli considers to be the key elements of QM and nothing more. For example in his RQM paper he says, "From the point of view discussed here, Bohr’s interpretation, consistent histories interpretations, as well as the many worlds interpretation, are all correct." That is, they all share those key elements (albeit they commit to further things as well that differentiates them from each other, such as many worlds versus a single world). — Andrew M
But unless one adds a selection postulate, I believe that before the measurement 'Alice'/'Wigner's friend' can safely say that all 'Alice-s'/'Wigner's friends' will remember 'her'/'him'. What do you think? — boundless
I'm not sure I see the issue you're raising here. But I would agree that post-measurement, Wigner's friend (or friends on a MWI-style reading) would have a memory of themselves prior to measurement.
Regarding a selection postulate for RQM, I think it's just unknown and RQM doesn't commit to anything specific. — Andrew M
I thought about that and it seems that post-measurement Alice has the same relationship to pre-measurement Alice as the relationship to post-measurement Bob, which is a superpostition of multiple unmeasured states. The perspectives are quite different but the relationships are essentially identical.I see what you mean, but 'pre-measurement Alice' can predict that 'she' will be 'remembered' by both 'post-measurement Alici'. — boundless
This hypersurface exists. So does this different hypersurface. That's just two different things, not a paradox.Ok, I agree. But my point was another. If you say that 'your' present exist (the 't=0' 3D hypersurface), then the Andromeda Paradox is unavoidable.
Totally agree. Two observers at the same place but different frames might disagree about what is going on at Andromeda, but they'll agree entirely about what has been measured. The light cone from that location is a frame independent thing.The answer to this objection is to not regard what is outside the light cone in the same way of what is inside from an ontological point of view.
Interesting corollary for a presentist, who by definition cannot observe any existing thing. In 8 minutes, the thing I observe will not be the present state of the sun. It will be an observation of something nonexistent.On the other hand, it seems intuitive to accept the 'existence' of the present (e.g. I will observe the present state of the Sun at t=8 minutes).
Agree that what I said depends on my personal choice for philosophy of mind. Some interpretations do give identities to things. Mine just happens not to.There is nothing physical that connects my current state to that past state as opposed to any other random arrangement of matter. Identity is abstract, not real. There are plenty of philosophical arguments that demonstrate this.
— noAxioms
I sort of agree with this (but the reasons are not exactly the same...as I said I have a different view about mind) - it seems that there is some kind continuity without, however, a persisting identity (but we are digressing maybe...). This is not IMO however a complete denial of the existence of 'individuality' (and 'identity' in some sense).
I consider it something discovered, not invented. If invented, pi would not be the same value in another world. OK, odds are the aliens don't express the value in base 10. That base is definitely a human invention.Nit-pick: you think that maths, a human invention, is more fundamental than the stuff of which the universe is built? — Pattern-chaser
Nit-pick: you think that maths, a human invention, is more fundamental than the stuff of which the universe is built?
— Pattern-chaser
I consider it something discovered, not invented. If invented, pi would not be the same value in another world. — noAxioms
I simply meant that without the selection postulate, it seems that RQM implies the splitting.
Anyway, I agree with you. RQM seems simply silent on this point. — boundless
I see what you mean, but 'pre-measurement Alice' can predict that 'she' will be 'remembered' by both 'post-measurement Alici'. — boundless
Therefore the future does exist to Alice, just not a specific state. The cat exists to Bob, even when in superposition of dead and alive. — noAxioms
Ok, I agree. But my point was another. If you say that 'your' present exist (the 't=0' 3D hypersurface), then the Andromeda Paradox is unavoidable. — boundless
This hypersurface exists. So does this different hypersurface. That's just two different things, not a paradox. — noAxioms
The answer to this objection is to not regard what is outside the light cone in the same way of what is inside from an ontological point of view. — boundless
Totally agree. Two observers at the same place but different frames might disagree about what is going on at Andromeda, but they'll agree entirely about what has been measured. The light cone from that location is a frame independent thing. — noAxioms
On the other hand, it seems intuitive to accept the 'existence' of the present (e.g. I will observe the present state of the Sun at t=8 minutes). — boundless
Interesting corollary for a presentist, who by definition cannot observe any existing thing. In 8 minutes, the thing I observe will not be the present state of the sun. It will be an observation of something nonexistent. — noAxioms
There is nothing physical that connects my current state to that past state as opposed to any other random arrangement of matter. Identity is abstract, not real. There are plenty of philosophical arguments that demonstrate this. — noAxioms
I sort of agree with this (but the reasons are not exactly the same...as I said I have a different view about mind) - it seems that there is some kind continuity without, however, a persisting identity (but we are digressing maybe...). This is not IMO however a complete denial of the existence of 'individuality' (and 'identity' in some sense). — boundless
Agree that what I said depends on my personal choice for philosophy of mind. Some interpretations do give identities to things. Mine just happens not to. — noAxioms
Not sure how you combine your mind interpretation with your QM one. Does the pre-Alice ontologically become one of the post-measurement Alici to the exclusion of the others because the mind-identity can only follow one of them? That's a very different QM interpretation. — noAxioms
Nit-pick: you think that maths, a human invention, is more fundamental than the stuff of which the universe is built?
— Pattern-chaser
I consider it something discovered, not invented. If invented, pi would not be the same value in another world.
— noAxioms
:up: — Wayfarer
I simply meant that without the selection postulate, it seems that RQM implies the splitting.
Anyway, I agree with you. RQM seems simply silent on this point.
— boundless
Maybe it's embarrassed. :yikes: — Wayfarer
So what Carroll means is that fields are fundamental and particles (and everyday things generally) emerge from the interaction of those underlying fields.
Or, as Wikipedia puts it, "QFT treats particles as excited states (also called quanta) of their underlying fields, which are—in a sense—more fundamental than the basic particles."
— Andrew M
‘in a sense’ ;-)
When it comes to this matter, that phrase carries a lot of weight. — Wayfarer
Right, we are talking about the temporal ordering of two events, when the light reaches the front of the traincar, and when the light reaches the back. Special relativity allows for contradiction in the ordering of these events. — Metaphysician Undercover
I simply meant that without the selection postulate, it seems that RQM implies the splitting.
Anyway, I agree with you. RQM seems simply silent on this point. — boundless
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