The branching is intrinsic to QM. — Andrew M
Everett’s scientific journey began one night in 1954, he recounted two decades later, “after a slosh or two of sherry.” He and his Princeton classmate Charles Misner and a visitor named Aage Petersen (then an assistant to Niels Bohr) were thinking up “ridiculous things about the implications of quantum mechanics.” During this session Everett had the basic idea behind the many-worlds theory, and in the weeks that followed he began developing it into a dissertation.
The core of the idea was to interpret what the equations of quantum mechanics represent in the real world by having the mathematics of the theory itself show the way instead of by appending interpretational hypotheses to the math. In this way, the young man challenged the physics establishment of the day to reconsider its foundational notion of what constitutes physical reality. ...
Everett’s radical new idea was to ask, What if the continuous evolution of a wave function is not interrupted by acts of measurement? What if the Schrödinger equation always applies and applies to everything—objects and observers alike? What if no elements of superpositions are ever banished from reality? What would such a world appear like to us?
Everett saw that under those assumptions, the wave function of an observer would, in effect, bifurcate at each interaction of the observer with a superposed object. The universal wave function would contain branches for every alternative making up the object’s superposition. Each branch has its own copy of the observer, a copy that perceived one of those alternatives as the outcome.
In the spring of 1959 Bohr granted Everett an interview in Copenhagen. They met several times during a six-week period but to little effect: Bohr did not shift his position, and Everett did not reenter quantum physics research. The excursion was not a complete failure, though. One afternoon, while drinking beer at the Hotel Østerport, Everett wrote out on hotel stationery an important refinement of the other mathematical tour de force for which he is renowned, the generalized Lagrange multiplier method, also known as the Everett algorithm. The method simplifies searches for optimum solutions to complex logistical problems—ranging from the deployment of nuclear weapons to just-in-time industrial production schedules to the routing of buses for maximizing the desegregation of school districts.
A point is reached where the person who (or the public opinion which) decides whether the money flows into the coffers, has to take the "truth" on faith, rather than understanding it in person. From this point on, the more inaccessible the sophistry, the better. The money continues to flow regardless, on faith alone. The problem then becomes looking as though you are doing something worthwhile, to justify the diversion of resources. It was in the mediaeval monasteries where this was perfected. They devised a scheme whereby the worth was to be realised in the afterlife (buying your way into heaven), so there was no way to test it.Modern speculative physics is the very same thing, sophistry. It is highly educated individuals simply seeking money to support their stream of false information. If they are to be rousted, as the sophists which they are, where else to start this movement other than a philosophy forum?
But it's not. It is the result of a simple conjecture: 'hey, what if the wave collapse DOESN"T OCCUR?' — Wayfarer
Copenhagen - Wavefunction collapse does not occur. — tom
According to the Copenhagen interpretation, physical systems generally do not have definite properties prior to being measured, and quantum mechanics can only predict the probabilities that measurements will produce certain results. The act of measurement affects the system, causing the set of probabilities to reduce to only one of the possible values immediately after the measurement. This feature is known as wavefunction collapse.
During an observation, the system must interact with a laboratory device. When that device makes a measurement, the wave function of the systems is said to collapse, or irreversibly reduce to an eigenstate of the observable that is registered.[12]
It is well known that the 'reduction of the wave packets' always appears in the Copenhagen interpretation when the transition is completed from the possible to the actual. The probability function, which covered a wide range of possibilities, is suddenly reduced to a much narrower range by the fact that the experiment has led to a definite result, that actually a certain event has happened. In the formalism this reduction requires that the so-called interference of probabilities, which is the most characteristic phenomena [sic] of quantum theory, is destroyed by the partly undefinable and irreversible interactions of the system with the measuring apparatus and the rest of the world.
The WIkipedia entry on the subject states that: — Wayfarer
In metaphysical terms, the Copenhagen interpretation views quantum mechanics as providing knowledge of phenomena, but not as pointing to 'really existing objects', which it regarded as residues of ordinary intuition.
There is no quantum world. There is only an abstract physical description. It is wrong to think that the task of physics is to find out how nature is. Physics concerns what we can say about nature
Such joy being reduced to selecting quotes from the same wikipedia page! — tom
Local realism and non-local realism have been falsified by several no-go theorems — tom
The wavefunction is not part of reality, and certainly collapse is not. — tom
a theory that is explicitly anti-realist cannot provide an explanation. The ONLY explanatory theory that exists, which agrees with QM all the way up through field theory and the Standard Model is Many Worlds. — tom
Physics concerns what we can say about nature — Neils Borh
It's more that in this matter I'm excruciatingly aware of how much I don't know. — Wayfarer
A point is reached where the person who (or the public opinion which) decides whether the money flows into the coffers, has to take the "truth" on faith, rather than understanding it in person. From this point on, the more inaccessible the sophistry, the better. The money continues to flow regardless, on faith alone. — Punshhh
So, the first quoted passage is incorrect, in your view? (I ask because it seems to contradict what you said in the post before). — Wayfarer
But these are all intepretations. When you say that something has or hasn't been falsified, all you're doing it is interpreting it in accordance with your chosen metaphysical view, which any statement about what the theory means must be. Everyone sees the same data, the only thing being discussed here is what it means. — Wayfarer
I interpret the wave-function as a distribution of probabilities. Is that not correct? — Wayfarer
Meanwhile my impression of MWI is that it's ad hoc to preserve determinism. — Terrapin Station
I like how you respond to that, but completely ignore the problem that Deutsch only defines "computational equivalence" for machines in the paper that supposedly "proves" the CTD principle. — Terrapin Station
Why is that a problem? — tom
Because the CTD principle isn't supposed to be only about machines, is it? — Terrapin Station
It has been shown by experiment that both local and non-local realist theories disagree with Reality. Quantum Mechanics has never been shown to disagree with Reality. — tom
It's only about machines. — tom
It's just standard guff written about an theory whose sole purpose is obfuscation and denial. I really couldn't care less about it, so can't be bothered forming an opinion. — tom
To claim you have an "interpretation" of a topic you know so little about is bizarre. — tom
I thought it was claiming that a universal computing device can simulate every physical process? Not every physical process involves a machine, unless he's claiming that everything is a computing device, but you explicitly denied that he was stating that. — Terrapin Station
it's not a claim, it is a testable deduction...for the umteenth time. — tom
it's not a claim, it is a testable deduction. — tom
But it's not. It is the result of a simple conjecture: 'hey, what if the wave collapse DOESN"T OCCUR?' That's all it is — Wayfarer
There is no quantum world. There is only an abstract physical description. It is wrong to think that the task of physics is to find out how nature is. Physics concerns what we can say about nature. — Bohr
Meanwhile my impression of MWI is that it's ad hoc to preserve determinism. — Terrapin Station
Bell - local realism falsified
Leggett - non-local realism falsified
It has been shown by experiment that both local and non-local realist theories disagree with Reality. Quantum Mechanics has never been shown to disagree with Reality. — tom
There is a lot more to the issue than that. There is nothing at all in QM that implies or predicts wave function collapse. Copenhagen doesn't postulate wave function collapse. — Andrew M
According to the Copenhagen interpretation, physical systems generally do not have definite properties prior to being measured, and quantum mechanics can only predict the probabilities that measurements will produce certain results. The act of measurement affects the system, causing the set of probabilities to reduce to only one of the possible values immediately after the measurement. This feature is known as wavefunction collapse.
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