What 'matter'? That's the problem! What is measured appears as waves or as particles. But, you're saying, behind what is measured there is 'the matter that already exists'. But that is the point at issue! What is being measured? We can't say what is 'behind' the measurement. One set-up produces a wave pattern, the other a particle pattern. Is it really waves or is it really particles? You can't say! That's the paradox, the whole issue in a nutshell. — Wayfarer
We can't say that they are attributes of some underlying neither-wave-nor-particle stuff. — Wayfarer
The answer you get depends on the question you ask, and you're severely limited in infering what is the case beyond that - or rather, there's nothing in physics which will provide you with a warrant for that kind of speculation. — Wayfarer
That there isn't 'a particle'. You're observing different results, but they're not 'of' something that acts in a certain way. — Wayfarer
But it’s not just “updating the model with new information” is it? — khaled
I appreciate the long explanation but there is nothing there I didn’t already know. — khaled
If we don't have new information, we cannot say what is happening other than the probability distributions that we already have based on old information. — boethius
I very much doubt this is true. — boethius
We can't say that they are attributes of some underlying neither-wave-nor-particle stuff.
— Wayfarer
Yes I can. What’s the problem with this? — khaled
Point is, these probability distributions are “ontological” for QM. It’s not that there “really is an electron somewhere” we just don’t know where, the electron “is really everywhere” in the probability distribution. Otherwise you wouldn’t get interference patterns. — khaled
That’s what I mean by not JUST updating the model with new information. Observations in QM change what is happening, not just what we think is happening. — khaled
It’s not like when the probability distribution of the location of the drowning person “collapses” when we see them, but really, there was always a person there even without us observing them. — khaled
"The evolution of conscious life on this planet is due to appropriate mutations having taken place at various times. These, presumably, are quantum events, so they would exist only in linearly superposed form until they finally led to the evolution of a conscious being—whose very existence depends on all the right mutations having 'actually' taken place!" — khaled
If there was an obvious conclusion to be drawn, the best physicists of the last hundred years would have drawn it and all agreed. — boethius
We do not need to make ontological assumptions about what "really exists" between measurements to make use of quantum mechanics. — boethius
I've already mentioned, it can just be supposed that all the possibilities propagate, including ones in which evolution happens, and the first possible consciousness collapses the cosmic wave function. No problem, no one's conscious before that to say otherwise — boethius
It is not the case that when the wave functions "collapses" that a particle is then considered to have taken a definite path, only the properties observed become more definite for the time of observation, but it is still the case that the particle in some way (we really don't understand) when through all possible paths to get to that observation point — boethius
I mean.... that is pretty much what happened when it comes to whether or not consciousness is necessary. They basically all drew the conclusion that it isn’t. That’s one of my first arguments. — khaled
But we can KNOW that the electron, unlike the drowning person, doesn’t “really exist somewhere” that we are finding out correct? Or else interference effects wouldn’t happen. — khaled
And DESPITE, no one being conscious before to say otherwise, we know certain things happened at certain times. — khaled
What you’re suggesting here is that in the xyz-time “block”, you start from time = 0 and as you move along particles take every which path available to them. But the second one of these paths hits consciousness, suddenly, the awesome power of consciousness causes collapse “back in time” correcting history so that only one path happened all along. This contradicts what you say here: — khaled
They don't all agree on an interpretation. — boethius
No, we can't know. — boethius
How would you backup your claim? — boethius
Does that establish you "know" the person is in a definite position before you go and check? No, it doesn't establish that. — boethius
The other possibilities "go away" upon observation, just like any other experiment. — boethius
It is not the case that when the wave functions "collapses" that a particle is then considered to have taken a definite path — boethius
Before anyone was conscious of what possibility the universe is actually in, there's no way to go back and check whether the possibilities co-existed in a quantum probability wave sense (or any sense) or then definite situations followed one to the other even if there was no one around to see it. — boethius
That's why the word "basically" is there. It's definitely a statistical majority. Which is as good as you're going to get. — khaled
Yes we can because if it did the interference pattern wouldn't emerge. — khaled
As above. — khaled
No but if throwing a bunch of people through two slits produces the result that the people act as "waves" until measured that precisely means that they don't act as particles all the time. In other words, that the people are "truly everywhere" in the probability distribution.
Now replace people with electrons.
Or in other words, if the electron really did exist as a particle in a spot, with a certain momentum, how do you explain why an interference pattern emerges when we don't measure the electron's location? — khaled
Except in this case... For some reason in this one case, when collapse happens at time t5, it also happens backwards for times t1,t2,t3,t4. It's either that, or everything we know about Cosmology is just wrong, and we can't really know it. — khaled
You claim this. But it's clearly false. We know definite situations followed one to the other even though no one was around to see them. That's what Cosmology establishes. By your theory we shouldn't be able to do cosmology. Since waves don't collapse unless seen by a conscious agent, and since we can't see the past, we should not be able to know anything about it. It should just seem like quantum soup. — khaled
As above.
— khaled
You backup your claim by just asserting "physicists agree with you", without providing any "well controlled experiment" of how this is even supported? — boethius
Yes we can because if it did the interference pattern wouldn't emerge. — khaled
But we can KNOW that the electron, unlike the drowning person, doesn’t “really exist somewhere” that we are finding out correct? Or else interference effects wouldn’t happen. — khaled
and we agree that the "substance" of the electron, in some sense, is represented by the probability distribution, which has wave characteristics and can interfere with itself to make interference patterns etc. — boethius
But, even so, who cares? — boethius
I don't know what we're debating here. — boethius
so in principle, as far as we know, it's possible with people too — boethius
Collapse does not happen backwards. All the possibilities related to t1, t2, t3, and t4 can be still "in play" and those possibilities are still co-existing at t5 as well, but when we make a measurement at t5, all the other possibilities "that could have happened" go away. — boethius
Definiteness occurs at observation, how would we check it occurred before? how would we check it occurred before? We'd have to go and observe what occurred before, defeating the purpose of the checking. — boethius
There is zero problem saying plenty of other possibilities "co-existed" until the first consciousness emerged to make such observations to collapse the wave function. — boethius
All possible cosmologies propagate from the big bang, and then the cosmic wave collapse happens and one definite cosmological history is "retained" once a "sufficient" consciousness emerges (in at least one of the possible cosmologies) and the wave function collapses. — boethius
The "probability waves going away" happen at that moment or before. If you argue "before", how do you prove it? — boethius
Problems of interpretation come from trying to explain why the electron sometimes appears as a particle and sometimes a wave. — khaled
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