So, which do you choose? Do you want to discuss MWI, or do you want to adhere to the "existence" which most reasonable people refer to? — Metaphysician Undercover
Many-Worlds does not propose infinite (or finite) branching universes. The branching is already integral to QM. — AndrewM
The Copenhagen Interpretation has to add a postulate to QM to prune the branches it doesn't want, which is the famous wave function collapse.
These are the kinds of considerations that motivate the Many-Worlds Interpretation.
Some might say that the world-shattering thing was Everett's relative state formulation.
So why, when the going gets tough, should we abandon what has proven to work and switch to the alternatives? It seems completely predictable that it will cause confusion.
This is a most enjoyable thread to read: thanks to all the participants. Sorry I've been too busy to contribute. Here is Nietszche (from another thread really!):...perhaps it is physics that is not complete, and that, maybe, this is because physics is not, in the end, a complete description of what is real. In other words, that what is real, is not physical. — Wayfarer
I have been fretting over the distinction between epistemology and ontology, surprised by its use in this thread. I don't think science in its practice deals with ontologies, and I don't think physicalists think so either. For example, I'm working on something about placebos. Scientific discourse about placebos uses 'beliefs' as data and refers to 'beliefs' in its hypotheses. But I don't think that commits physicalists to an ontology including mental terms like 'belief': they may perfectly well claim that such epistemic terms stand for an equivalent more fundamental physical term, or that the mental supervenes on the physical....even physics is only a way of interpreting or arranging the world...and not a way of explaining the world. — Nietzsche
...we have no grounds in our experience for taking our laws - even our most fundamental laws of physics -as universal. Indeed, I should say 'especially our most fundamental laws', if these are meant to be the laws of fundamental particles. For we have virtually no inductive reason for counting these laws as true of fundamental particles outside the laboratory setting - if they exist there at all. — Nancy Cartwright
That's the irony. Many-Worlds does not propose infinite (or finite) branching universes. The branching is already integral to QM. The Copenhagen Interpretation has to add a postulate to QM to prune the branches it doesn't want, which is the famous wave function collapse. — Andrew M
Conversely, there is nothing forcing someone who debates physics - while accepting the methods of science - into an ontology of one kind or another. There's a whole Stanford group of philosophers of science who would say this, including Dupre and...
...we have no grounds in our experience for taking our laws - even our most fundamental laws of physics -as universal. Indeed, I should say 'especially our most fundamental laws', if these are meant to be the laws of fundamental particles. For we have virtually no inductive reason for counting these laws as true of fundamental particles outside the laboratory setting - if they exist there at all. — Nancy Cartwright — mcdoodle
It's not an either-or. MW is just the ordinary language interpretation of QM.
That doesn't imply that things will therefore exist in the way that we might intuitively think. Who knew that things wouldn't have a precise position and momentum at the same time? They still exist, but we've learned new things about them. — Andrew M
It is an either-or, you're just in denial. You're claiming that the only possible starting point for meaningful discussion, is the premise that things exist in the intuitive, common sense notion of "things exist" — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, there is indeed "no inductive reason for counting these laws as true"- because there is no such thing as an inductive reason for any explanation, let alone for arriving at an explanatory scientific theory.
I must at your quote to my list of generic ways to deny reality - the direct appeal to fallacy — tom
How do you explain quantum interference if the other path does not "exist"? How can things that don't exist be physically causal? — tom
Causality is a description, and there is nothing which prevents us from making imaginary or fictitious descriptions.How can things that don't exist be physically causal? — tom
Causality is a description, and there is nothing which prevents us from making imaginary or fictitious descriptions. — Metaphysician Undercover
You describe yourself as a Positivist, i.e. you hold the view that all statements apart from those describing or predicting measurements are meaningless. — tom
That doesn't mean that I'm a logical positivst wholesale, and I certainly do not agree with them on the idea of meaning, etc., — Terrapin Station
Your theories of the inapplicability of reason, and the theory of consciousness-induced-creation, — tom
You complain about abstractions and mathematics. — tom
Sure, but try making a fantasy or fictitious EXPLANATION. — tom
From premisses via inductive reasoning we arrive at conclusions. Premiss 1: There are well-demonstrated laws X in the lab. Premiss 2: Lots of things that are lawful in the lab turn out to be lawful outside the lab. Premiss 3: Laws X are one of those sorts of thing. Conclusion: Laws X apply all over the place.
How do you think lab findings end up as (supposed) neutrinos passing through me and you outside labs? — mcdoodle
we have no grounds in our experience for taking our laws - even our most fundamental laws of physics -as universal. — Nancy Cartwright
For we have virtually no inductive reason for counting these laws as true of fundamental particles outside the laboratory setting - if they exist there at all. — Nancy Cartwright
A fictitious explanation is even easier than a fictitious description, — Metaphysician Undercover
So, you are defending the assertion that..(quote from Cartwright) — tom
Well, there is indeed "no inductive reason for counting these laws as true"- because there is no such thing as an inductive reason for any explanation, let alone for arriving at an explanatory scientific theory. — Tom
This is a most enjoyable thread to read: thanks to all the participants — MacDoodle
In other words, whether the protons are fired singly or as a beam, makes no difference to the interference pattern. — Wayfarer
But the point of the experiment is that even a single particle will behave like a wave - a superposition of a pair of probability waves. — Apokrisis
If you're trying to make a point, you should explain yourself more clearly, because what you have said so far appears as irrelevant nonsense. — Metaphysician Undercover
The question seems to be: how can a particle 'interfere with itself'? — Wayfarer
It seems as if the probability distribution is itself like the so-called 'pilot wave' - in other words, it determines all the possibilities, but only in the sense of constraining the possible paths that any particle takes, whether individually or as part of beam. — Wayfarer
The issue of course is that we have no good explanation in terms of concrete commonsense notions. So you are not going to get the kind of answer you are seeking in terms of things you think you understand. — Apokrisis
We know that only one particle gets emitted, one particle gets detected. But on its travels, it acts like a classical wave and responds to the shape of the experimental apparatus accordingly. — Apokrisis
So the wavefunction itself is the product of some environmental arrangement, some set of constraints that give shape to a "process". — Apokrisis
So if the pattern is not rate-dependent, then by implication the cause of the pattern is not a function of time. — Wayfarer
You mean the pattern isn't the function of other particle histories. — Apokrisis
Thanks! I took a question over to physics forum and made what I consider an original discovery. This is that the interference pattern in the double-slit experiment is not rate-dependent. In other words, whether the protons are fired singly or as a beam, makes no difference to the interference pattern. So that means that the interference is not dependent on time and space. Which suggests to me that the so-called 'wave function' is not something in time or space either. — Wayfarer
The pattern is dictated by the wave function. That will be so regardless of which apparatus or set-up you're using. The equation which describes the distribution is not dependent on the apparatus, although I imagine that the particulars of each set-up might produce variations because of the distances involved etc. — Wayfarer
But the underlying determinative cause is the wave equation itself - however the wave equation is not a material cause, as it is not something which exists, it's simply a pattern of probabilities, as the name says. — Wayfarer
So I think the real sticking point is, how can a probability be causally efficacious. Isn't that what the whole argument is about? That's what Einstein kept saying to Bohr - 'God doesn't play dice'. He made a slogan out of it. — Wayfarer
The reason why the rate-independence is significant, is that the behaviour of individual 'particles' (not that they're actually particles) is described by the wave-function, whether they're together or separate. In other words, whatever is causing that, is independent of space/time, or, that duration and the proximity of 'particles' are not factors in determining the result. Or so it seems to me. — Wayfarer
That's not confusing super-position and entanglement, although what I'm starting to think is that the 'rate-independence' of the pattern, and the so-called 'entangled states', are actually two aspects of the same underlying cause. — Wayfarer
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