We then introduce an error into the measurement of the initial velocity. Regardless of how small that error is, it will build over time until the error in predicted position is greater than the length of the cavity. — Banno
Principle of infinite precision
1. Ontological – there exists an actual value of every physical quantity, with its infinite determined digits (in any arbitrary numerical base).
2. Epistemological – despite it might not be possible to know all the digits of a physical quantity (through measurements), it is possible to know an arbitrarily large number of digits. — Indeterminism, causality and information: Has physics ever been deterministic? by Flavio Del Santo
In fact “as soon as one realizes that the mathematical real numbers are not really real, i.e. have no physical significance, then one concludes that classical physics is not deterministic.
But what's the point?
Whether or not a real number is or is not a "real" number is beside the point, and not at all relevant. What is relevant is the "natural uncertainty in all observations", which some use of real numbers tends to veil with the pretense of what he calls "infinite precision".
This natural uncertainty is true of all all descriptions of initial conditions, so it applies to all inertial reference frames. Since the uncertainty develops exponentially with the passage of time, we rapidly become deficient in the capacity to distinguish between an improperly represented inertial reference frame, and an external cause in the occurrence which follows. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now the default position adopted in my high school physics class was that the error was introduced by a lack of precision in the measurement. The assumption was that there is indeed some real number that gives the exact velocity to infinite precision, and that the error represented the degree to which one could operationally approximate the actual velocity. The alternative explanation being offered by Del Santo is that the initial velocity does not correspond to some real number, but instead to some region of the real numbers. The boundaries of this region are also indefinite, but lies within the bounds of our arbitrarily accurate measurement. — Banno
Sounds like determinism to me. Initial conditions lead to subsequent conditions. Banno is using determinism to show that determinism is false.It's also worth noting that if our measurements of initial position and velocity are inherently imperfect, so will any subsequent measurements of position and velocity also be imperfect. — Janus
It's a wonder that them physicist get anything right. — Banno
(1) Disentanglement of causality from necessity. Positive claim: there can be causes which do not follow of necessity. — StreetlightX
...causality is post-hoc — StreetlightX
Sounds like determinism to me. Initial conditions lead to subsequent conditions. Banno is using determinism to show that determinism is false. — Harry Hindu
I think you think I’m disagreeing with you more than I am. — Pfhorrest
Probably. — Banno
...but one ball or a thousand, the result is still a normal distribution. — Banno
So despite causality being after the event we can predict the outcome. Is there a contradiction here? — Banno
For any given initial location X of the ball in a Galton box, there will be some positive number delta(X) such that a measurement of initial conditions with error less than delta(X) can predict the outcome with certainty. — andrewk
That sits uneasy with the hypothetical claim that we could if only it were specified to sufficient precision; that "if only" means we're no longer talking about the above box. — fdrake
So QM determines that determinism is impossible?Asserting determinism, or at least what is often referred to as "hard" or "rigid" determinism consists in claiming that from any set of conditions there can arise only one outcome at any subsequent time. An often cited "thought experiment" is that if it were possible to restart the evolution of the universe from the initial moment it came into being it would again unfold exactly, down to the minutest detail, as it has actually done this time.
This is an entirely groundless assumption. Under the aegis of Newtonian mechanics this may have seemed obviously true, but in the light of QM it seems not only vanishingly unlikely, but even just plain impossible. — Janus
Sounds like more determinism. Seems like errors determine outcomes.Simplest interpretation is that he doesn't understand a measurement's being accurate to within a certain error. — Banno
"We see that to give content to the idea of something’s being determined, we have to have a set of possibilities, which something narrows down to one – before the event". — StreetlightX
I fail to see how a digital system used to measure an analog reality indicates that reality is indeterministic. It seems that what you are saying is what is indeterministic is our measurements, not reality. With that, I would agree. Measurements are like views, which could explain some of the results of the double-slit experiment. Taking measurements or views alters the effects. That doesn't mean that indeterminism is true, it means that our existence as observers and our measuring devices plays a causal role in the very events we are observing and measuring. Solving the mind-body problem I believe will provide the necessary link between classical mechanics and QM - between the macro and the nano, and unite them.Simplest interpretation is that he doesn't understand a measurement's being accurate to within a certain error. Now that's Lesson 1 in physics. Same seems to be true of his use of "determinism", vacillating between cause and ascertain... the result was determined (caused) as against the result was determined (ascertained). — Banno
The sleight of hand that makes determinism seem to be a system property seems to be the specification of an initial condition with sufficient precision; as if the specification of an initial condition was done externally to the dynamics of any actual Galton box. — fdrake
The probability of one ball falling in any particular bin is given by the normal curve....but one ball or a thousand, the result is still a normal distribution.
— Banno
Certainly not one ball (you can't have a distribution of one ball). — StreetlightX
The sleight of hand that makes determinism seem to be a system property seems to be the specification of an initial condition with sufficient precision; as if the specification of an initial condition was done externally to the dynamics of any actual Galton box. — fdrake
the 'search' for initial conditions... can be nothing other than a fixing of initial conditions in order to make determinism a system property. — StreetlightX
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