It's like the scientific method never happened! — 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
Now, it's when the model which is necessitated by the successful math, does not make sense, as is the case with MW, that we have to turn back to the principles whereby the mathematics is applied, to see where the mistakes are. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is confused because just how we interpret mathematical equations as theories and just what we do or do not count as an explanation has no implications for whether it is or isn't like "the scientific method never happened." — Terrapin Station
Do you have any cites to back up your contrary claim? — Andrew M
Explanation is an account of why something happens. I've just quoted Duhem, probably the main proponent of instrumentalism in the 20thC, who rejects that physical theories are explanatory. Do you have any cites to back up your contrary claim? — Andrew M
So on your view, how we interpret mathematical equations as theories has implications for whether it's as if the scientific method never happened because _____ ? — Terrapin Station
could you translate that into something less incoherent? — 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
So what about MW does not make sense, or is mistaken, on your view? — Andrew M
It's a contradictory notion that all possible worlds are actual. In my understanding of possibilities, any possibility must be actualized before it can become an actuality. If all possible worlds are assumed to have actual existence, without a cause (source of actualization), then this is contradictory to my understanding of "possible". — Metaphysician Undercover
Only real superposition states can cause real interference effects. — Andrew M
The interference effects are phenomenal. The phenomenon is described as possibilities. — Metaphysician Undercover
Quantum interference effects are real and are predicted by Schrodinger's equation. You won't find any mention of possibilities or probabilities in the Schrodinger equation. — Andrew M
Therefore the equation does represent possibilities — Metaphysician Undercover
According to Wikipedia: "Its spectrum is the set of possible outcomes when one measures the total energy of a system." — Metaphysician Undercover
The Schrödinger equation describes the (deterministic) evolution of the wave function of a particle. However, even if the wave function is known exactly, the result of a specific measurement on the wave function is uncertain.
Probabilistic language relates to the measurement of the system, not its ontology, which is what the Schrodinger equation describes. — Andrew M
We can easily observe that three sets of four trees equals twelve trees, for example. — John
It represents all the energy within the system. Probability is inherent within the Hamiltonian — Metaphysician Undercover
In order to apply the Schrodinger, there must be some initial measurements of energy which is attributed to the system. — Metaphysician Undercover
Probability is inherent within the way that this energy is represented in the equation, it is the energy of the particles. — Metaphysician Undercover
No it is easy enough to visualize three groups of four or four groups of three, and to see that it equals twelve. Of course it's not possible with larger numbers of objects. But really the idea of simple multiplication is just an extension of the idea of simple addition. For the simplest case where you have two objects it can be intuitively understood that one plus one equals two or that two times one equals two. — John
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