The natural causal explanation is that we are seeing multiple phenomena that exhibit an interference pattern when they are in superposition. — Andrew M
This is where the realist metaphysics kicks in. What explains the interference pattern in a double-slit experiment? What is actually interfering? — AndrewM
What if probability waves are exactly what they seem - distributions of possibilities? So the patterns will appear along the lines of possibility, but when an object is measured, then they're no longer subject to probability, so the wave "collapses". But really nothing collapses because nothing was there in the first place other than a potentiality.
I think the issue with that, is that so-called 'realism' can't accomodate the notion of a 'real possibility'. It wants to assign existence in terms of a binary value - something either exists or it doesn't. But Heisenberg recognised that on the sub-atomic level, things 'kind of' exist. The parallel, in metaphysics, is the distinction between potential and actual existence - so the observation 'actualises' the potential existence of the object. — Wayfarer
But supposing that "there are multiple, branching universes" certainly doesn't strike me as a "natural causal explanation" that's more reasonable than "this stuff has some unusual characteristics that seems to behave like a wave at times and like a particle at times; we don't completely understand why yet, but these equations work for making predictions about it." Instead, it seems like incoherent fantasy.material. — Terrapin Station
That is what the 'realist' approach is wanting to preserve - the fundamental separation of observer and observed. — Wayfarer
If a single photon is fired in the double-slit experiment, the probability that it arrives at any particular position on the back screen is a function of the sum of the paths it could take.
There are really only two options available. Either the paths are real or they are not. — Andrew M
(One other option is that QM is false, but I don't think anyone is arguing for that.) — Andrew M
Either the paths are real or they are not. — AndrewM
[Bohr said] there was no such thing as a particle with a well-defined path. It was this lack of definite trajectory that was behind the appearance of an interference pattern, even though it was particles, one at a time, which had passed through the two-slit set-up, and not waves.
There are really only two options available. Either the paths are real or they are not. — Andrew M
Instrumental interpretations don't care about ontological commitments. It's a matter of simply approaching the explanation or account as something that works for what it is, where it doesn't matter if it's a fiction or not.
Ontological commmitment interpretations are the opposite, obviously. One takes the explanation or account to be literally picking out things in the world, just as they are. — Terrapin Station
I'm an instrumentalist on some things, and not on other things. I particularly tend to be an instrumentalist with respect to explanations/theories that are mathematical-only (or primarily), or that are more abstract in received view interpretations. — Terrapin Station
You forgot one important option. Is the photon real? — Metaphysician Undercover
These 'particles' have no definite location until being measured; they're not in one place and don't have an actual trajectory. That is the 'fuzzy' nature of quantum particles. So the interference patterns might really represent the probabilities and nothing more than that; they're not really trails left by a particle, because there really aren't any particles until they're measured. — Wayfarer
In terms of talking about ontological commitments yes. But you can simply see it as an instrumental way of talking about what's going on, and assume that we don't really understand at all just what photons are like ontologically yet. What's really going on, what photons are really like, might be something that we can't really fathom yet. "Paths" are just a way to relate it to what we can conceive of, what we have experience with, etc. — Terrapin Station
Scientific theories are meant to be ontological commitments, which means they can be tested (and potentially falsified). — Andrew M
Scientific theories are meant to be ontological commitments, which means they can be tested (and potentially falsified). — Andrew M
But even if you disagree, firing single electrons will also produce an interference pattern. In fact the double-slit experiment has been performed with molecules comprising 810 atoms. — Andrew M
On making observations of fossils, paleontologists developed a theory of dinosaurs to explain fossils. — Tom
None of those alternative theories are empirically distinguishable from the rational theory of fossils, yet we manage to reject them. Not so in QM unfortunately. — tom
But in my post, I questioned the existence of all objects, so referring to molecules doesn't change anything. — Metaphysician Undercover
That I certainly don't agree with. I agree with the tested/potentially falsified part, but that doesn't mean that theories etc. are not read instrumentally, and I neither agree that (a) something makes it the case that theories etc. are meant to be read as ontological commitments nor that (b) most scientists read theories etc. as ontological commitments rather than instrumentally. — Terrapin Station
The EPR paper was one of these 'thought experiments' - it was that paper that led to the Bell's Inequality paper which was published in 1964 (many scientists will say that it is one of the greatest scientific papers in history). And it was that paper that formed the basis of the Alain Aspect experiments which in the early 1980's empirically demonstrated the entanglement of remote paired particles, thereby showing that the EPR paper was wrong. It was the final nail in the coffin of Einstein's realist philosophy, pending something world-shatteing coming along. — Wayfarer
Hence, this whole debate. I wouldn't think you would propose infinite branching universes unless you had a real need to do so. — Wayfarer
OK, but then QM would not be applicable to anything since it only applies to things that exist.
While of course there are philosophical issues here, the fact is that most people reasonably do think that many things exist and also think that standard scientific explanations are applicable to those things. So that really needs to be the starting point for any meaningful discussion. — Andrew M
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.