Energy is the ability to do work. If at maximum entropy there is no energy available to do work, then effectively there is no energy on that definition. — Janus
As he puts it, decoherence gives us quasi-classical worlds (branches) but not actual classical worlds. Which means that decoherence can be treated as irreversible and the worlds as classical for all practical purposes. Nonetheless interference between branches continues to happen in accordance with quantum mechanics. — Andrew M
The Andromeda Paradox is about the ambiguity of what time it is elsewhere, not about the state being definite. The former is a frame dependent thing and the latter is a statement of superposition of something unmeasured. I think you meant the former but your wording suggested the latter. — noAxioms
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
Yes! In Relativity the ordering of events in every light cone is an invariant (unless one accepts tachyons or any FTL influence). — boundless
I didn't say that. I said the set of events in a given light cone is frame independent. The ordering of those events is still quite frame dependent. — noAxioms
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
Yep! Presentism is somewhat problematic in Relativity. I would say that 'global presentism' is simply incompatible with relativity of simultaneity. Maybe a form of 'local presentism' can be saved but it is surely counter-intuitive (I personally lean towards some form of presentism and I admit that I am troubled by this). — boundless
I have done an advocatus diaboli thread defending the compatibility of relativity and presentism, so I maintain that they're not incompatible. SR says that the preferred frame cannot be determined given the special case after which it is named. But inability to detect such a frame does not mean that there isn't a special one. Presentism doesn't even require it to be a inertial frame, and no presentist that knows their physics seems to assert that it corresponds to such a frame. The foliation is always bent, which has the interesting paradoxical implication that no two stationary observers are simultaneous in each other's inertial frames. I find that hilarious, but not paradoxical. — 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
Maybe it's embarrassed. :yikes: — Wayfarer
Well, possibly! :razz: — boundless
This is why I resist describing RQM under presentist terms. If time is external to the structure that is the universe, then such selection is an objective act relative to this realm under which time exists, and it isn't really RQM anymore if such an objective action takes place.
With time being part of the structure, no event/state (something to which a relation can be made) 'flows' to a different event, necessitating such a selection. Thus there is no selection postulate.
This isn't an embarrassment, just an implication of a relative interpretation. — noAxioms
Yes. With locality, which is essentially saying no FTL.I am not sure I am following you. In fact, I just am saying that the cause precedes the effect in all reference frames without FTL. Isn't it right? :smile: — boundless
Pilot wave is a form of Bohmian mechanics: Pro counterfactual definiteness (objective state) and denial of locality. So I wonder how they interpret spooky action at a distance using pilot waves. I don't know the official line on that. They certainly cannot reproduce spooky action using a classic pilot wave setup like they use for double slit.Ok, I see. Interesting, thanks! I wonder if this can be used to reconcile SR with pilot-wave theory... :smile:
Is there a way to block somebody in this forum? — i aM
Yes. With locality, which is essentially saying no FTL. — noAxioms
Pilot wave is a form of Bohmian mechanics: Pro counterfactual definiteness (objective state) and denial of locality. So I wonder how they interpret spooky action at a distance using pilot waves. I don't know the official line on that. They certainly cannot reproduce spooky action using a classic pilot wave setup like they use for double slit. — noAxioms
By my understanding, in PWT the pilot wave controls the velocity of the particle. And that velocity depends not only on the position of the particle, but also the positions of all the particles it is entangled with; and that information is all available instantaneously to the pilot wave which controls the velocity of the particle. I don't see how that can be reconciled with SR. — i aM
I have done an advocatus diaboli thread defending the compatibility of relativity and presentism, so I maintain that they're not incompatible. SR says that the preferred frame cannot be determined given the special case after which it is named. But inability to detect such a frame does not mean that there isn't a special one. Presentism doesn't even require it to be a inertial frame, and no presentist that knows their physics seems to assert that it corresponds to such a frame. The foliation is always bent, which has the interesting paradoxical implication that no two stationary observers are simultaneous in each other's inertial frames. I find that hilarious, but not paradoxical. — noAxioms
Isn't a core idea of SR "relativity of simultaneity", i.e. simultaneity of events is entirely dependent on the reference frame of the observer? — i aM
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