Metaphysician Undercover
It's the ambiguity of the interpretation which realism can't stand - something has to be either real (1) or not (0). It can't cope with the idea that there are 'degrees of reality'. — Wayfarer
tom
I don't understand them. I only know (from what's been said of them) that they add to the de Broglie–Bohm theory the one thing that it doesn't normally explain; particle creation and annihilation. If that is indeed what they do then they are non-local hidden variable theories that agree with the results of quantum mechanics up to at least quantum field theory. — Michael
Andrew M
Right. And how are you seeing any mathematics as amounting to any sort of ontological commitment whatsoever? — Terrapin Station
Michael
I see. You don't have an argument — tom
There is also a an experiment that had slipped my mind - the famous Before-Before experiment which refutes any Bohmian theory including relativistic versions.
Terrapin Station
That's what it means to regard QM as an explanatory scientific theory. — Andrew M
aletheist
Mathematical models on their own, sans ontological commitments, are taken to be sufficient for explanatory scientific theories. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
Every mathematical model is a diagrammatic representation of an ideal state of things. — aletheist
aletheist
What is the source for that being what mathematical models are? — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
As you might have guessed, it is something that I picked up from Peirce. — aletheist
aletheist
Saying that all mathematical models would be examples of necessary reasoning seems dubious to me. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
aletheist
Terrapin Station
F=ma is a diagrammatic representation that embodies the relations among force, mass, and acceleration--all of which are concepts that we have defined in order to facilitate this mapping of an idealized state of things to something in experience. — aletheist
any ontological commitments are manifested in the mapping of the model — aletheist
aletheist
The problem I see with this is that we're not mapping F=ma to F equaling m times a in experience ... — Terrapin Station
... mathematics isn't an empirical science. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
aletheist
Andrew M
Mathematical models on their own, sans ontological commitments, are taken to be sufficient for explanatory scientific theories. — Terrapin Station
This is essentially taking an instrumentalist approach to mathematical models, but it's neither an alternative nor a rejection of realism--it's rather noncommittal on the question because it's avoiding any ontological commitments. — Terrapin Station
Reading the Schrodinger equation as implying real, parallel worlds, rather than simply being a mathematical model that allows accurate predictions, is making ad hoc assumptions that are not implied by the mathematical model. — Terrapin Station
Andrew M
I don't buy that we can observe a multiplicative relation or that mathematics is observational. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
If a scientific theory, per instrumentalism, makes no ontological commitments (i.e., is neither true nor false), then neither can it be offering an explanation. — Andrew M
tom
You didn't ask for an argument, and nor did I claim to have one. You asked for a hidden variable theory that agrees with the results of quantum mechanics. I provided what seems to be just that. — Michael
The only mention of that I can find is by Antoine Suarez. I can't find any other sources that corroborate his findings, but I can find several that say that no experiment refutes Bohmian mechanics. — Michael
Metaphysician Undercover
This is akin to saying that the heliocentric model makes accurate predictions but it's an ad hoc assumption to suppose the model implies that the earth orbits the sun. — Andrew M
aletheist
I'm an anti-realist on mathematics. — Terrapin Station
aletheist
So we have to go back to the principles which underlie the application of the mathematics to determine why the very successful mathematics produces an unacceptable model. — Metaphysician Undercover
Metaphysician Undercover
Terrapin Station
Yes, that is what I would have guessed. Just curious, then - how do you explain the element of surprise, the fact that there are genuine discoveries in mathematics? — aletheist
aletheist
... future constructions can be unpredictable, one can come to realizations about present constructions that weren't apparent at first, etc." — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
tom
It's just a matter of what people consider an explanation or not. And a large percentage of relevant academics consider mathematical equations read instrumentally to be explanations. — Terrapin Station
tom
Right, and my point was that this happens because mathematics is observational - manipulating and then reexamining a diagram can reveal new information. The difference, of course, is that we are observing our own (ideal) constructions, rather than something "out there" in the (actual) universe. — aletheist
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