If we flip a coin a thousand times, we can be pretty confident that 50% of the flips will be heads. If we lack confidence in logic, we can do it and then be happy that we can predict the future.And yet the real instances of flipping fair coins produce this kind of distribution. Very similar to sex proportions in birth. — fdrake
I don't understand what you're asking.The claim that 'if we knew all relevant information then the future would be fixed' isn't inconsistent with 'probability; when what flipping a coin is contains that uncertainty about the future.
Who is doing all this knowing? Where is it in the system? — fdrake
As I've said, there are times when knowing all relevant information isn't possible, even in theory. Even if it were possible, that information would also have to be processed in order to make a prediction. — T Clark
If we flip one coin, we know zero, nada, not-a-fucking-thing about the outcome (unless the system is rigged or we have Laplace's demon on hand.) I'm sure you agree with that? — frank
We may regard the present state of the universe as the effect of its past and the cause of its future. An intellect which at a certain moment would know all forces that set nature in motion, and all positions of all items of which nature is composed, if this intellect were also vast enough to submit these data to analysis, it would embrace in a single formula the movements of the greatest bodies of the universe and those of the tiniest atom... — Wayfarer
for such an intellect nothing would be uncertain and the future just like the past would be present before its eyes.
You actually know quite a lot about the outcome. It's described as 50% heads 50% tails. We don't know what the outcome is but we have a complete specification of the system; all relevant info is encoded there, right? Anyway. — fdrake
I know this doesn't really clear up much of the relationship between uncertainty and determinism, or randomness and determinism, but hopefully it provides a useful distinction between what's going on in (1), (2) and (3). — fdrake
If we flip a coin a thousand times, we can be pretty confident that 50% of the flips will be heads. If we lack confidence in logic, we can do it and then be happy that we can predict the future. — frank
If we flip one coin, we know zero, nada, not-a-fucking-thing about the outcome (unless the system is rigged or we have Laplace's demon on hand.) I'm sure you agree with that? — frank
As fdrake says, knowing that there is a 50/50 chance it will come up heads is not "nada." It's more than we know about lots of things that are a lot more important than coin flips. — T Clark
(1) If you have a complete specification of a system at some time t, then it is specified for all times before t and after t. Positions, momenta, orientations, that kind of thing.
(2) The specification procedure for all preceding and following states can be obtained by 'submitting the data to analysis'. Presumably this is a codification of all relationships of the basic variables of nature that entail everything about everything else given sufficient manipulation....
(3) In such a description, nothing would be uncertain (for the subject of 1 which has the specification procedure in 2). — fdrake
a football ....(which is very spherical) — fdrake
50/50 is an assessment of a formal system, not the outcome of a unique coin toss.
Maybe it would help if we considered an unbalanced object. It has a 97% chance of coming up heads. What does 97%/3% tell you about a unique toss? — frank
In any case the truth of any philosophical position can never be proven. — Janus
It is my understanding that QM is considered a deterministic theory. — T Clark
Who is doing all this knowing? Where is it in the system? — fdrake
I think the 'uncertainty principle' slays LaPlace's daemon. It's directly relevant to the issue. — Wayfarer
Think more simply. When something is ‘determined’ it is known, and when something is predicted it is ‘guessed’ based of determined knowledge (educated guess).
People playing at philosophy will always try and put their own special spin on it to make themselves feel validated.
As for “ontology” and “epistemology”, I agree. They are the same thing and it is merely a convenient demarcation of speech - the underlying game of philosophy where the physicist doesn’t much bother themselves with such - to be frank - tail chasing drivel (and nor do philosophers of any substance). — I like sushi
But it does, T. Clark. It's not that far from what you're saying about the impossibility of being able to know all of the factors that collectively bring about an outcome ruling out the possibility of Laplace's Daemon. — Wayfarer
So it's not as if the all-seeing mind could predict how those entities are going to act in advance, as the act of perceiving them is implicated in the outcome. So they're in some sense un-knowable in principle; not simply not perceived. — Wayfarer
And that, of course, is one of the principle tenets of the Copenhagen interpretation of physics, of which Werner Heisenberg was one of the chief proponents. It undermines determinism. (Actually I have just learned that if you begin to search Copenhagen interpretation and det.... that google remembers the query and fills in the last word - which tells you something!) — Wayfarer
As I understand, in accordance with the most common interpretations, the epistemological question is "What do we know and how do we know it?", and the metaphysical question is "What is there, and is it independent of our perceiving/knowing it?".
Of course, we can have one view or the other regarding both of these questions, and there is no question of "proof" as you have agreed. Is there any truth in these matters? — Janus
Is there any truth in these matters? If so, is the truth ultimately a matter of consensus, as pragmatism would have it? Or is it a matter of mere personal preference; what works for me or you? Is it a matter of plausibility, and if it is, how do we derive a standard of plausibility that is not itself a matter of mere preference or consensus? — Janus
If one adopts an interpretation of QM according to which that's it—i.e., nothing ever interrupts Schrödinger evolution, and the wavefunctions governed by the equation tell the complete physical story—then quantum mechanics is a perfectly deterministic theory.... — T Clark
...according to the 'relative state formulation' of Hugh Everett, which, however, requires that the universe 'branches' every time an observation is taken. — Wayfarer
There is a point....where "completely outside the scope of human possibility" turns into "not possible even in theory."
— T Clark
At that point, in my, and others, opinions, it stops being deterministic. — T Clark
It's a theoretical projection based on the principle of what an all-knowing mind would know. As Hawkings famously said, 'If we discover a complete theory, it would be the ultimate triumph of human reason – for then we should know the mind of God.' — Wayfarer
Thanks for your explanation. It's still not clear to me why you think,assuming that the physical world is completely deterministic, chance could come into it, other than conceptually in relation to our predictions. — Janus
, who does the knowing that vouchsafes this kind of determinism? — fdrake
It seems to me that if you are making the case that something is the case because something else is the case, then you are making the case for determinism.
If something is completely outside the scope of human possibility and that makes it not possible in theory, and that makes the case that there isn't determinism, then you just made the case for determinism. — Harry Hindu
What exactly is outside the scope of human possibility? How would we know such a thing? — Harry Hindu
It's just folk wisdom that the mead you're drinking isn't going to turn into petroleum on its way down your throat without a knowable explanation.
How is our confidence in that justified? Opinions vary, but I don't think anyone believes it's dependent on somebody knowing something. — frank
* A system is deterministic just in case the state of the system at one time fixes the state of the system at all future times. A system is indeterministic just in case it is not deterministic.
* Causal determinism is, roughly speaking, the idea that every event is necessitated by antecedent events and conditions together with the laws of nature.
* Determinism is the understanding that all events, including moral choices, are completely determined by previously existing causes. — T Clark
I guess what I'm gesturing towards is why should we care about the perspective of God on a system when God's external to it? It's a question of how structures are internalised to systems, rather than abstracting away from the details of all of them. So in my question to frank, "who's doing the knowing?", who does the knowing that vouchsafes this kind of determinism? It can't be located within a functionally bounded system - one which has demarcated modes of operation, it can only be the totality of all things viewed from the perspective of that infinite intellect. — fdrake
Terms I could use help with - "structures are internalized;" "functionally bounded system;" and "demarcated modes of operation." — T Clark
why should we care about the perspective of God on a system when God's external to it? — fdrake
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