From ~25mins for the purely QM stuff. — tom
If you take the pilot wave route, determinism is preserved, but it posits hidden variables which, as you may guess from the name, there is no evidence for. — Andrew M
But a consequence of that is that the world 'splits' at the point of measurement, and/or that there are countless 'parallel worlds'. Once again - doesn't that seem intuitively strange to you? — Wayfarer
What does it say about other 'fundamental laws' like the conservation of energy? — Wayfarer
Why do you think the probabilistic nature of the wave-function is sufficiently troublesome to consider such an alternative? — Wayfarer
So re the Schrodinger equation, do you disagree with this statement: "The associated wavefunction gives the probability of finding the particle at a certain position"? — Terrapin Station
I agree that the ontology of probability is interesting. This 'from 25 mins on' wasn't 'purely QM stuff' at all, though, it was a prolonged lecture about metaphysics. My view of philosophy is that you imagine all the best arguments people can put up against you, and you rebut them. In this lecture Deutsch seems instead to be imagining a series of feeble opponents who haven't considered the slightest subtlety in their position. Even an actuary has a defence to the notion of probability, let alone proponents of statistical mechanics and so on. — mcdoodle
Why isn't all this in a peer-reviewed paper where his intellectual equals like Wallace and Timpson could respond and critique it? — mcdoodle
If you take the pilot wave route, determinism is preserved, but it posits hidden variables which, as you may guess from the name, there is no evidence for. — Andrew M
It's redundant to say there is no evidence for hidden variables. If there was evidence, they wouldn't be hidden. But "evidence" is a property of the mind which seeks relationships, it is not a property of the physical world. So evidence may be right in front of one's eyes, or even right on one's list of observations, but if that individual does not establish the appropriate relationships, it is not seen as evidence, and so it is claimed, "there is no evidence". — Metaphysician Undercover
So, the point Andrew M, I am a metaphysician, not even a physicist, and I can identify numerous possible hidden variables, such as gravity, expansion of space, dark matter, dark energy, so I don't know how many possible hidden variables there really is. Very many I would say. From my perspective there is massive evidence for hidden variables. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes it's counterintuitive. That's not a valid argument against it. If that's the way the world is, then we should change our intuitions. — Andrew M
Okay, but that's the probability I'm talking about there being a desire to remove. There's still a probability of what one will observe in one's world, but it's no longer a probability that only one outcome will obtain (via measurement) while others do not obtain. — Terrapin Station
So, the point Andrew M, I am a metaphysician, not even a physicist, and I can identify numerous possible hidden variables, such as gravity, expansion of space, dark matter, dark energy, so I don't know how many possible hidden variables there really is. Very many I would say. From my perspective there is massive evidence for hidden variables. — Metaphysician Undercover
What you have demonstrated is that you haven't the first clue what is meant by the term "hidden variable". Look it up! — tom
All hidden variable theories disagree with quantum mechanics, so they are wrong. — tom
As Tom mentions, hidden variables have a particular history in a quantum context. In particular, Bell's Theorem shows why no physical theory of local hidden variables can reproduce all of the predictions of quantum mechanics. — Andrew M
Each of these superposition states are assigned an amplitude which, per the Born Rule, are convertible into equal probabilities that Alice measures spin-up and spin-down. Both measurement outcomes are present in the wave function. — Andrew M
But in MWI, the probability that both are measured is 100%, no? One is measured in one world. The other is measured in another world. — Terrapin Station
I have looked it up. And I've watched the clip Wayfarer provided above, thank you Wayfarer. Furthermore, I know very well what a variable is, and I know very well what it means for a variable to be hidden. And as I explained, I see many variables hidden behind mathematics, the mathematics making them appear as constants. — Metaphysician Undercover
You seem to be in some sort of state of denial, afraid to face the possible reality of non-locality. — Metaphysician Undercover
So in a double-slit experiment with a particle, name the hidden variable. — tom
Or chapters 5 and 6 of this book by Wallace: — tom
Wallace's strategy of axiomatizing a mathematically precise decision theory within a fuzzy Everettian quasiclassical ontology is incoherent. Moreover, Wallace's axioms are not constitutive of rationality either in Everettian quantum theory or in theories in which branchings and branch weights are precisely defined. In both cases, there exist coherent rational strategies that violate some of the axioms. — Adrian Kent
What might have been and what has been
Point to one end, which is always present.
Footfalls echo in the memory
Down the passage which we did not take
Towards the door we never opened
Into the rose-garden. — T S Eliot
The predictions are supplied by the mathematics, correct? — Terrapin Station
don't have the maths to spot the problems in the proofs, or not, but it seems clear once you read around the literature that the key issue is what assumptions one brings to the party before proposing a so-called 'proof' — mcdoodle
The predictions are supplied by the mathematics, correct?
— Terrapin Station
Yes — Andrew M
The strongest critic of Wallace in the book above is Adrian Kent, a Reader in quantum physics at Oxford. Here is how he summarises his criticism:
Wallace's strategy of axiomatizing a mathematically precise decision theory within a fuzzy Everettian quasiclassical ontology is incoherent. Moreover, Wallace's axioms are not constitutive of rationality either in Everettian quantum theory or in theories in which branchings and branch weights are precisely defined. In both cases, there exist coherent rational strategies that violate some of the axioms. — Adrian Kent — mcdoodle
I'm amazed the Deutsch-Wallace approach hinges on decision theory and assumptions about rationality. Decision theory is quite a hotly-debated topic in its own right so I wouldn't build a mountain on it. Well, maybe a rough algorithm for how people act, but no 100% right view. — mcdoodle
Maybe you could briefly describe those theories and indicate to what extent they are capable of dealing with particle interactions etc. — tom
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