I think 'we don't know' is the superior answer. Physics is getting hopelessly entangled in pseudo-metaphysics, Everett's being the most egregious example. A dose of humility and a sense of the limitations of science might be preferable. — Wayfarer
By all means keep an open mind. Nonetheless, Everett's is the only theory that explains why we see quantum interference effects. So it is the theory to beat. — Andrew M
except for it's not 'a theory', it is a metaphysic. — Wayfarer
predictions regarding conscious agents running on reversible quantum computers. — Tom
We went along with collapse was real, and it was the "observation" which made it real. — Moliere
Heisenberg: ....we have to remember that what we observe is not nature in itself but nature exposed to our method of questioning. Our scientific work in physics consists in asking questions about nature in the language that we possess and trying to get an answer from experiment by the means that are at our disposal.
But the point that I want to make, is that the Pythagorean theorem can only by known by a mind. So it's not mind-dependent, in the sense of being reliant or this or that mind, but in the sense of only being perceptible by a mind. So, what is, includes or implies a mind capable of grasping the truth! But that is what had been bracketed out of the scientific method by Galileo and his successors; this is where the idea of 'mind-independent' came from. So I think Einstein's conception of realism is at fault. Essentially, it doesn't want to recognize the limitations of science; saying that science sees 'things as they truly are' is a conceit.
Now, I've realised what I think is wrong about this view. This is that science views reality through theories and hypotheses. And what I think Einstein is forgetting (and, hey, he's Einstein, so I know I'm saying a lot!) is that the kinds of purported facts that he is arguing about are only disclosed by a rational intelligence who is capable of interpreting the facts. So 'the facts' - and by extension, even the moon - don't exist irrespective of whether one is looking or not. 'Looking' is inextricably intertwined with what is being observed. That has always been the case, but it took 'the observer problem' for it to more or less come up and punch us in the nose! — Wayfarer
Orzel's understanding of Many Worlds has improved over the years: — tom
How do you measure an interference effect? Well, you look for some oscillation in the probability distribution. But that’s not a task you can accomplish with a single measurement of a single system– you can only measure probability from repeated measurements of identically prepared systems.
If you’re talking about a simple system, like a single electron or a single photon in a carefully controlled apparatus, this is easy. Everything will behave the same way from one experiment to the next, and with a bit of care, you can pick out the interference pattern. As your system gets bigger, though, “repeated measurements of identically prepared systems” become much harder to achieve. If you’re talking about a big molecule, there are lots more states it could start in, and lots more ways for it to interact with the rest of the universe. And those extra states and interactions mess up the interference effects you need to see to detect the presence of a superposition state. At some point, you can no longer confidently say that the particle of interest is in both states at once; instead, it looks like it was in a single state the whole time.
And that’s it. You appear to have picked out a single possibility at the point where your system becomes too big for you to reliably detect the fact that it’s really in a superposition.
http://scienceblogs.com/principles/2015/02/20/the-philosophical-incoherence-of-too-many-worlds/
(Finally, the above probably sounds more strongly in favor of Many-Worlds than my actual position, which shades toward agnosticism. But nothing makes me incline more toward believing in Many-Worlds than the gibberish that people write when they try to oppose it.)
I'm all for some version of retrocausality. But you are invoking a globally general version that again betrays perfect world thinking and not the fuzzy logic approach that I would take.
This thermal view of time says the past is pretty much solid and decohered, the future is a bunch of open quantum possibilities. And then quantum retrocausality would be about very local and individual events which are criss-crossing this bulk picture.
The bulk seems definitely sorted in having a sharp split between past context and future events. But on the fine grain, past and future are connected because - as with quantum eraser experiments - the context can take a "long time" to become fixed in a way that then determines the actual shape of the wavefunction. It is only in retrospect that we can see all that went into its formation.
The trouble with Asian metaphors is that culturally they lack mathematical development. So they are inherently fuzzy in being verbal descriptions. At best, using proto-logical arguments, they are proto-mathematical. — apokrisis
I never understood all the confusion around CI, surely it's obvious that what will be observed is a facet determined by the capacities of the instrument being used to do the observing. — Punshhh
An existence where? This is where the many worlds come in. ...You measure the path of an electron, and in this world it seems to go this way, but in another world it went that way.
That requires a parallel, identical apparatus for the electron to traverse. More – it requires a parallel you to measure it. Once begun, this process of fabrication has no end: you have to build an entire parallel universe around that one electron, identical in all respects except where the electron went. You avoid the complication of wavefunction collapse, but at the expense of making another universe.
As quantum physics developed, it undermined common-sense realism or even scientific realism. Einstein wanted to see a fundamental material unit, not all of this wave-particle ambiguity and now-you-see-it now-you-don't magic tricks. It offended his sense of propriety. — Wayfarer
only for 'weak' mwi; for the strong version there really are countless separate or parallel universes. And that is metaphysics, — Wayfarer
If we were to survey physicists, what percetage do you think would say that they buy MWI instrumentally versus buying it as making a realist ontological commitment? — Terrapin Station
But insofar as physics is purported to be about what is real, then dorm-room bull is inevitable, as far as I am concerned. — Wayfarer
In the ‘multiverse’ of the Many Worlds view, says Tegmark, ‘all possible states exist at every instant’. That’s quite an ambiguous statement, since it might either mean all states that could evolve from some initial configuration, or all imaginable arrangements of all particles. But, either way, we face some nonsensical implications. You see, the MWI does some radical stuff to you and me.
‘The act of making a decision,’ says Tegmark – a ‘decision’ here being interchangeable with an experiment or measurement – ‘causes a person to split into multiple copies.’ Brian Greene, another prominent MWI advocate, tells us gleefully that ‘each copy is you’. In other words, you just need to broaden your mind beyond your parochial idea of what ‘you’ means. Each of these individuals has its own consciousness, and so each believes he or she is ‘you’ – but the real ‘you’ is their sum total.
But as Orzel argues, properly speaking, this weirdness applies strictly only to isolated systems - parts of the world that are essentially disconnected from the thermal bulk. To get entanglement and quantum coherence, you have to be dealing with the very small and the very cold. And that takes special equipment. Generally the world is too hot and messy for quantum effects to manifest. The weirdness is always there, but classicality is about it becoming heavily suppressed. — Apokrisis
But physics can't claim to talk directly about what is real. All it can claim is to talk in a fashion that is systematically constrained by "the evidence". So it is ultimately a social practice. — Apokrisis
So it is clear Orzel indeed has you stumped because you can offer no analysis at all. But just saying "nope" is not going to get you out of the hole here. — apokrisis
Andrew, 'Worlds' doesn't begin with 'M', does it. The question was, what does "M" stand for? And obviously the answer is 'many' - as in 'many worlds'. That is what it means, it refers to branching or splitting or multiple universes. — Wayfarer
Now, if it doesn't mean that, then there's nothing to debate. If the 'many' in 'many worlds' is simply an hypothetical mathematical construct or device, then it's back to 'shut up and calculate'. But the controversy is about the notion that it really does say there are many or parallel realms. — Wayfarer
Hawking is on record stating it is "trivially true". — Tom
"But, look: All that one does, really, is to calculate conditional probabilities—in other words, the probability of A happening, given B. I think that that's all the many worlds interpretation is. Some people overlay it with a lot of mysticism about the wave function splitting into different parts. But all that you're calculating is conditional probabilities."
"I don't demand that a theory correspond to reality because I don't know what it is. Reality is not a quality you can test with litmus paper. All I'm concerned with is that the theory should predict the results of measurements. Quantum theory does this very successfully. — Stephen Hawking
People simply use different terminology to refer to the same phenomena. What is being referred to is the many paths, or branches, that can be in superposition. — AndrewM
Andrew, 'Worlds' doesn't begin with 'M', does it. The question was, what does "M" stand for?. And obviously the answer is 'many' - as in 'many worlds'. That is what it means, it refers to branching or splitting or multiple universes. — Wayfarer
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