Just said that stochastic phenomenon look like a duck. — Olivier5
if you are aware that stochastic methods are used to model deterministic processes and yet insist that anything modelled stochastically is random, you do give up the right to be taken seriously — Kenosha Kid
Maybe that's what it is ontologically. Or maybe not, but ontology is for metaphysicians.
But in the Copenhagen interpretation the probabilistic model really is only just a working hypothesis. Ontologically there is Heisenbergs uncertainty principle which states that certain properties cannot be measured without influencing the system (i.e. shoot photons at other small bodies without playing billiard) or measure a frequency exactly at a given point in time (as frequency is defined as N/dt).But a working hypothesis is quite different from some absolute cosmic ontological a priori statement... — Olivier5
I understand why you're evading the question, but even you must see this is horrifically inconsistent. On the one hand, things seem deterministic but, because of small error, the thing itself is non-deterministic. — Kenosha Kid
Oh, the importance of points is again something that is based on value, not on truth. Didn't you point out such a thing as problematic?The important point to realize is that neither determinism nor indeterminist can ever be proven true or false, as they are statements about the ultimate nature of reality. — Olivier5
Yes, that is the measurement problem. At a given time, we know how much of the wavefunction should be |decayed> and how much |undecayed> but we don't know which we'll see when we measure. — Kenosha Kid
That would still be selected for. Sickle cell disease is an example. It confers a survival disadvantage in and of itself, but ends up making the odds of survival greater. If sickle cell disease conferred no survival benefit due to immunity from malaria, it would have been eliminated from the genome due to its survival disadvantage. — Kenosha Kid
Which is back to the non-determinism of the gaps: anywhere where it might show its face it is obliged to hide in tiny error bars. — Kenosha Kid
And that's a fundamental problem. I.e. we cannot just improve our measuring apparatus in some way. Either we come up with new physics, or this stays, whether it's an actual ontological reality or not? — Echarmion
There is no evolutionary mechanism by which traits that confer a fitness disadvantage are removed. — Echarmion
A bayesian might well argue that far from the world appearing to be deterministic, it actually appears probabilistic. — Echarmion
A bayesian might well argue that far from the world appearing to be deterministic, it actually appears probabilistic. — Echarmion
Determinism is the theory that every event is the result it's causes, probabilistic thinking (or stochastic for that matter) is about our ability to know with certainty what that event will be given the causes. The two are not only mutually compatible, they're not even in the same subject area, I'm lost as to why they keep getting treated as mutually exclusive options for the 'way the world is'. — Isaac
Determinism is the theory that every event is the result it's causes, — Isaac
Is it conceivable that there is a world where events have connections, but the connections are not mechanical? That is, for a given state at T0, more than one future state of the system is possible? — Echarmion
every given set of causes results in one and only one possible set of effects...If a given set of causes can result in several possible effects, then the effects are not fully determined and thus we are in an indeterminist outlook. — Olivier5
Is it conceivable that there is a world where events have connections, but the connections are not mechanical? That is, for a given state at T0, more than one future state of the system is possible? — Echarmion
The strictest form of determinism would be a mechanical determinism, where the state of the system at any given time can be exactly known if the state at one specific time is known. That would mean events are "mechanically" connected, so that each event has fixed connection to each other event. — Echarmion
Is it conceivable that there is a world where events have connections, but the connections are not mechanical? That is, for a given state at T0, more than one future state of the system is possible? — Echarmion
I've not heard this definition anywhere — Isaac
That is, for a given state at T0, more than one future state of the system is possible — Echarmion
I don't think this is a proven fact. Pretty large molecules have been found to display wave-particle duality, for instance. This said, I personally doubt the explication for "the hard problem" is as simple as quantic physics. There's a lot more we don't know in there.The neurological basis of decision-making, for example, which started this discussion, needs, under indeterministic interpretations, some mechanism whereby physical action is brought about without physical causation. QM is often invoked as the mechanism, but so far resolves to classical mechanics at a cellular scale, so cannot account for it. — Isaac
Yes, that's the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics. — Kenosha Kid
Certainly conceivable, I think, but our inability to determine future states based on states at T0 is of uncertain ancestry, we don't know why we don't know. That's why I think the link between our uncertainty (probabilistic relations) and determinism (the nature of those relations, of which our theories are just models) is a poorly supported one. — Isaac
Any useful injection of an indeterministic interpretation of uncertainty at a macro scale has to compete with (and posit alternatives to) physical causation. — Isaac
The neurological basis of decision-making, for example, which started this discussion, needs, under indeterministic interpretations, some mechanism whereby physical action is brought about without physical causation. QM is often invoked as the mechanism, but so far resolves to classical mechanics at a cellular scale, so cannot account for it. — Isaac
The alternative explaination for uncertainty (there are literally millions of neurons firing at once and each takes a slightly different route and has done since birth, hence chaos). Requires the invention of no mechanism not already posited and explains the phenomena without flaw.
So, insofar as we don't know what the source of our uncertainty is, it seems odd to invoke new mysterious mechanisms when the ones we already have explain it perfectly well. — Isaac
So it's at least not absurd to assume some amount of ontological "randomness". — Echarmion
Since determinism is in principle falsifiable, and any fortuitously constrained non-determinism is not, determinism is the scientific choice — Kenosha Kid
the question of whether the universe is "actually" deterministic is ill conceived. It makes no practical difference to our ability to make predictions. — Echarmion
Physical causation is an interesting term. Is causation physical? Because causation doesn't actually seem to describe a physical process. It seems more like a value judgement by which we identify some part of the web of physical processes as the "cause" and another as the "effect". — Echarmion
It's unclear to me what it means for "indeterminism to resolve to determinism at a cellular scale", except as a statement on our ability to predict outcomes. Physically, what actually happens always happens at the micro scale. The macro scale is a human construct. Not some arbitrary fantasy, of course, but still an abstraction based on our particular sensory and mental apparatus. — Echarmion
So, insofar as we don't know what the source of our uncertainty is, it seems odd to invoke new mysterious mechanisms when the ones we already have explain it perfectly well. — Isaac
Could you explain what you refer to as "our uncertainty" here? I don't really follow. — Echarmion
Weaving out a system of axioms is not falsifiable either but that is exactly what mathematicians do all day long. And maths is often called the only pure science. — Heiko
As I've said a few times, if we ever devise a test to discern whether QM is Copenhagen-like or MWI-like that is inconsistent with the latter, I would consider fundamental determinism falsified — Kenosha Kid
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