This problem manifests in the Fourier transform, and is well known as the uncertainty principle. — Metaphysician Undercover
Reference to what do you mean?Perhaps you should provide a reference just to make the context a little clearer. — Metaphysician Undercover
Thus, are we fooled about reality when we take our models to be more real than reality itself by ascribing ontological/physical significance to their results? To what extent is Heisenberg's uncertainty principle anything more than simply the limitation of our capacity to model reality? — Agustino
It was Einstein's view that reality is more determinate than the knowledge limitation imposed by Heisenberg's uncertainty principle suggest it to be — Pierre-Normand
But experimental tests of the hypothesis of a more determinate underlying reality have put Einstein's hope for the vindication of "local realism", and the merely epistemic intepretation of Heisenberg's inequalities, under severe stress. — Pierre-Normand
It now rather seems like the uncertainty principle really is a true indetermination principle, as proponents of the Copenhagen interpretation had always argued. — Pierre-Normand
In my opinion this is a more widespread problem with the sciences in general, not just qm. It's rampant throughout physics, including fields like astrophysics. — Terrapin Station
Your reply has nothing at all to do with the question.The question has nothing to do with anything anyone might find panic-worthy, either, as far as I can see. Perhaps try saying something more relevant next time; that's the best way, if you genuinely want to engage in an actual conversation. — John
Reference to what do you mean? — Agustino
Given the state at any time, the future can be retrodicted and the past can be predicted. — tom
Epistemic interpretations such as Copenhagen are unfalsifiable, — tom
The laws of physics are fully deterministic — tom
I wouldn't put it that way, because the inaccuracy predicted by the HUP is much smaller than our ability to perceive. So HUP does not impinge on our reality.To what extent is Heisenberg's uncertainty principle anything more than simply the limitation of our capacity to model reality? — Agustino
:s I did provide a reference, what are you talking about? If someone clicks your name in my quote, they'll be taken to the post where the quote is from - to the context...You started your thread with a quote from me. Don't you think you should provide a reference as to where the quote was taken from? Otherwise it is a quote taken out of context. — Metaphysician Undercover
I wouldn't put it that way, because the inaccuracy predicted by the HUP is much smaller than our ability to perceive. So HUP does not impinge on our reality. — andrewk
I wouldn't put it that way, because the inaccuracy predicted by the HUP is much smaller than our ability to perceive. So HUP does not impinge on our reality. — andrewk
We need to be careful here. I think it's safer to say that experimental evidence is consistent with what we would expect if the HUP holds. Maybe I'm getting too Popperian about this, but I wouldn't call that confirmation.Well, the HUP has been experimentally confirmed — SophistiCat
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