So what is causing the pattern is not physical energy but purely probability. — Wayfarer
Sounds like something you say in a cult. Never mind me, I never got past understanding how one defines an 'observer' in QM. — Question
There is plenty of "physical energy" represented in the experimental apparatus set up to make the quantum observation. — Apokrisis
So your concern is based on the mystery of how probability spaces might arise out of nothing. — Apokrisis
And, if cats can be alive and dead at the same time, how come when we look at them we only see definitely-alive cats or definitely-dead cats? We can try to answer the second question by invoking some mysterious new dynamical process – a “collapse of the wave function” whereby the act of looking at half-alive, half-dead cats magically causes them to jump into alive-cat or dead-cat states – but a physical process which depends for its action on “observations”, “measurements”, even “consciousness”, doesn’t seem scientifically reputable. So people who accept the “state-as-physical” view are generally led either to try to make sense of quantum theory without collapses (that leads you to something like Everett’s many-worlds theory), or to modify or augment quantum theory so as to replace it with something scientifically less problematic.
It may seem a subtle point, but what I said was there was no (classically-imagined) particle. There was "an evolving wave of probability of detecting a (classically-imagined) particle that reflects the shape of the apparatus".
So I was trying to highlight the irreducible quantum contextuality of the existence of any "particle". — apokrisis
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
David’s point (or my understanding thereof) is that the wave function serves the same role in explaining where the photon hits the plate as dinosaurs serve in explaining where fossils come from — namely, you can’t do without it. It’s a crucial part of our best explanation, and therefore deserves to be called “real” (or “physical,” if you want to be a bit more precise) by any sensible criterion.
So what I would like to argue is that the 'probability wave' is 'real but not physical'. — Wayfarer
As you describe, apokrisis, the particle exists only in the context of the apparatus. — Metaphysician Undercover
But I also generalise the notion of apparatus so that the Cosmos is "an apparatus". It does have a past history that acts as a constraint on quantum indeterminacy. — apokrisis
There is only one wavefunction. — tom
All physical interactions are treated exactly the same. — tom
All physical interactions are local, having no effect on space like separated regions. — tom
Yet still, you are not saying what you mean by non-physically real. — Apokrisis
the point of dispute was about the issue of "time dependence". — Apokrisis
Quantum physics requires that we "think outside the box," and that box turns out to be space-time itself. The message of quantum physics is that not only is there no absolute space or time, but that reality extends beyond space-time. Metaphorically speaking, space-time is just the "tip of the iceberg": Below the surface is a vast, unseen world of possibility. And it is that vast, unseen world that is described by quantum physics.
This is not a wholly new idea: Another founder of quantum theory, Werner Heisenberg, stated that a quantum object is "something standing in the middle between the idea of an event and the actual event, a strange kind of physical reality just in the middle between possibility and reality." Heisenberg called this "potentia," a concept originally introduced by the ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle.
I think the original observation I have come up with is that if the interference pattern in the double-slit experiment is not rate-dependent, then it is not time-dependent, as rate is a function of time. This can't be the same for physical waves. Therefore, what is causing the pattern is non-physical. — Wayfarer
She then goes on to outline something called the 'transactional interpretation', which I can't say that I understand. — Wayfarer
The first quote gives me the impression that this one wavefunction is representative of all interactions between objects in space, which seems to go against quote 3. — Question
Now, I'm having trouble understanding how quote 2 and 3 can coexist. All physical interactions are treated exactly the same relative to what? — Question
part of the incompleteness of quantum mechanics is that it has to presume a backdrop classical time dimension... — Apokrisis
Werner Heisenberg, stated that a quantum object is "something standing in the middle between the idea of an event and the actual event, a strange kind of physical reality just in the middle between possibility and reality." Heisenberg called this "potentia," a concept originally introduced by the ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle.
If the wavefunction exists as a mathematical conception existing in Hilbert space, then I am compelled to agree with Tegmark's belief that reality is mathematics manifest. I find it hard to think otherwise — Question
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