Don't take MW seriously, just take the Schrödinger Equation seriously! — tom
There needs to be empirical evidence backing it up at some point, or else it will always remain an interpretation. If no empirical evidence can ever be given, then it's not scientific, but it's rather metaphysics, akin to saying we're living inside a simulation. — Marchesk
So they believe in a real, physical infinity, as opposed to a mathematical infinity? I thought infinities in physics meant there was a problem with the theory requiring revision. — Marchesk
The old argument from personal incredulity! — tom
Motion does not have to be constantly sustained by a mover? What have you been smoking, Galileo? :-} — SophistiCat
All quantum interference experiments are evidence of Many Worlds. — Tom
@Tom - could I put the question to you: what problem is the 'many worlds' interpretation a solution for? Why is it necessary to invoke 'many worlds'? — Wayfarer
Thanks - that's pretty close to what I thought, but I don't understand your first point, 'an observation entangles the observer with objects on a particular world branch'. I had thought 'entanglement' was what Einstein meant when he spoke of 'spooky action at a distance'. What does 'entangling an observer with objects' mean? How does that manifest? — Wayfarer
You say that MWI is 'highly explanatory' - it may be, but at the cost of assuming an infinite number of parallel universes. — Wayfarer
Under MWI, entanglement is just correlation. In terms of the EPR experiment, there will be a pair of correlated opposite-spin particles on one branch and another pair on another branch and these branches are in superposition. When Alice observes the first particle, a process of decoherence occurs whereby Alice becomes correlated with the pair of particles on one branch (and similarly on the other branch). There is no spooky action at a distance because there is no action happening between the particles at all. — Andrew M
The difficulty is in coming up with a coherent interpretation that omits the other branches. If the other branches aren't real, then what causes the interference effects? — Andrew M
If the other branches aren't real, then what causes the interference effects? — AndrewM
The branching isn't assumed. It's just the natural interpretation. That's what the summing over paths is about. The difficulty is in coming up with a coherent interpretation that omits the other branches. If the other branches aren't real, then what causes the interference effects? — Andrew M
The branching is an artifact of quantum mechanics still being formulated using classical mathematics when all the evidence, including macroscopic evidence, indicates nature is fundamentally analog and what is required, at the very least, is some sort of fuzzy logic variation on the excluded middle. That includes modern quantum mechanics which are formulated as wave mechanics according to the Schrodinger Equation. — wuliheron
What you get depends on exactly what went on when you sent a particular photon in. A little gust of wind might result in a slightly higher air density, leading to a bigger phase shift. Another gust might lower the density, leading to a smaller phase shift. Every time you run the experiment, the shift will be slightly different.
Why do we talk about decoherence as if it produced “separate universes?” It’s really a matter of mathematical convenience. If you really wanted to be perverse, and keep track of absolutely everything, the proper description is a really huge wavefunction including that includes pieces for both photon paths, and also pieces for all of the possible outcomes of all of the possible interactions for each piece of the photon wavefunction as it travels along the path. You’d run out of ink and paper pretty quickly if you tried to write all of that down.
Since the end result is indistinguishable from a situation in which you have particles that took one of two definite paths, it’s much easier to think of it that way. And since those two paths no longer seem to exert any influence on one another– the probability is 50% for each detector, no matter what you do to the relative lengths– it’s as if those two possibilities exist in “separate universes,” with no communication between them.
In reality, though, there are no separate universes. There’s a single wavefunction, in a superposition of many states, with the number of states involved increasing exponentially all the time. The sheer complexity of it prevents us from seeing the clean and obvious interference effects that are the signature of quantum behavior, but that’s really only a practical limitation.
Questions of the form “At what point does such-and-so situation cause the creation of a new universe?” are thus really asking “At what point does such-and-so situation stop leading to detectable interference between branches of the wavefunction?” The answer is, pretty much, “Whenever the random phase shifts between those branches build up to the point where they’re large enough to obscure the interference.” Which is both kind of circular and highly dependent on the specifics of the situation in question, but it’s the best I can do.
That's close to my own thinking, but was obviously written before the discovery that the second law of thermodynamics is violated more frequently the smaller anything becomes and completely ignores the Quantum Zeno Effect. — wuliheron
The simplest explanation is that time can flow both forwards and backwards because a context without significant content and any content without a greater context is a demonstrable contradiction. — wuliheron
. Its enough to make Zeno's head spin, but its a more Asian metaphoric take on the issue. — wuliheron
What bugged Einstein is his native faith that reality was 'there anyway', whereas the Copenhagen advocates all said that in this matter, the line between observer and observed was no longer clear-cut. And I'm with them on that, as far as I can understand it. — Wayfarer
We always differentiated between instrumental interp from CI, though. — Moliere
So the Copenhagen Interpretation says there is a line for sure. We sit on its classical side. And where that line gets drawn to rule off the quantum side is something we can't answer. — Apokrisis
(p262)Scientists had always conducted their experiments on the unspoken assumption that they were passive observers of nature, able to look without disturbing what they were looking at. There was a sharp distinction between object and subject, between the observer and observed. According to the Copenhagen Interpretation, this was not true in the atomic realm.
Unlike objects in the everyday world, 'atoms or elementary particles are not as real; they form a world of potentialities rather than things or facts'
[Einstein] continued to believe in a reality where natural phenomena unfolded according to the laws of nature, independently of an observers.
'What we call science', he said, 'has the sole purpose of determining what is' Physics for him was an attempt to grasp reality, as it is, independent of observation. It is in this sense, he said, that 'one speaks of "physical reality" '.
EINSTEIN: Truth, then, or Beauty is not independent of Man?
TAGORE: No.
EINSTEIN: If there would be no human beings any more, the Apollo of Belvedere would no longer be beautiful.
TAGORE: No.
EINSTEIN: I agree with regard to this conception of Beauty, but not with regard to Truth.
TAGORE: Why not? Truth is realized through man.
EINSTEIN: I cannot prove that my conception is right, but that is my religion.
TAGORE: Beauty is in the ideal of perfect harmony which is in the Universal Being; Truth the perfect comprehension of the Universal Mind. We individuals approach it through our own mistakes and blunders, through our accumulated experiences, through our illumined consciousness — how, otherwise, can we know Truth?
EINSTEIN: I cannot prove scientifically that Truth must be conceived as a Truth that is valid independent of humanity; but I believe it firmly. I believe, for instance, that the Pythagorean theorem in geometry states something that is approximately true, independent of the existence of man.
CI as people currently use it seems more 3 than 1 these days. — apokrisis
Rather than being defensive, why not critique Orzel from your point of view? That would be more interesting. — apokrisis
Under MW, entanglement is not just a (statistical) correlation. "Correlation" is the wrong word. It is the anti-explanatory word used by anti-realists to avoid any questions about why their algorithm works, particularly as the algorithm does not apply to reality, but rather what can be said about reality.
Rather, under MW, the physical mechanism by which the right branches encounter each other - in order to preserve conservation laws etc - is termed "information flow" or something similar. The process was fully worked out here: http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/quant-ph/9906007 — tom
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.