So with the Copenhagen Int., we can talk about superposition, but we aren't talking about reality. That's so weird. — frank
There is no quantum world. There is only an abstract quantum physical description. It is wrong to think that the task of physics is to find out how nature is. Physics concerns what we can say about nature. — Niels Bohr (as quoted by Aage Petersen)
the shut-up-and-calculate philosophy or the Copenhagen interpretation (which I think of as shut-up-and-calculate minus the shutting-up part)
— Get real - Scott Aaronson, Nature Physics, June 2012
Haha that's excellent! — Kenosha Kid
That is, what we can say about nature is that you will find, with some well-defined probability, either a dead cat or a live cat in the box when you open it. — Andrew M
But how is it that we are able to experience an object as a singular unit , separated out from a
multiplicity of which we deem it to belong , such that we can proceed to perform these feats of logic? Husserl’s fist published work , the philosophy of arithmetic, offers a fascinating genesis of such seemingly irreducible concepts as that of the discrete , self-persisting object from mix more basic acts , wherein there is as yet no concept of formal object.
For instance, according to Husserl, the basis of any sort of whole of independently apprehended parts(a whole in the pregnant sense) is the collective combination, which is an abstracting act of consciousness uniting parts. — Joshs
In this particular case, there is no direction towards the answer. Rather, every direction is as good as any other. — khaled
And this is true of everyone. It's not about the limitations of the individual but the limitations of being human. — khaled
If these limitations are truly the limitations of being human, as you believe, they are still not the limitations of being alive. — Metaphysician Undercover
Nowhere have I seen the claim that a human being has no direct access to the independent ordering of the world justified. — Metaphysician Undercover
I remember Donald Hoffman claiming that whenever he tried to simulate evolution on a machine using some sort of "game system", the organisms that ended up surviving were ones that did not understand "the reason that orders the world" but who instead just managed to find a "reason internal to the mind" that specifically suits their survival needs and nothing more. — khaled
The world isn’t mathematical; we are.
— Mww
I think that's an artificial distinction. The point is that we can predict, ascertain, control, discover, all through the application of mathematics. — Wayfarer
Put another way, it's not just how 'the mind' works, but that there's a corresponding order in nature. — Wayfarer
Right. Sorry for assuming that we're talking about humans. Once we meet aliens or once we evolve to the point where we classify as a different species then yes, we may see more. — khaled
It is justified by definition. You have access to the reason in your mind. You don't have access to "the reason that orders the world". — khaled
Any theory about "the reason that orders the world" is just that, a theory. As long as it accounts for own reasoning and perceptions the only thing separating it from any other theory is Occam's razor. — khaled
If you do believe in evolution then you ought to believe that it is more likely than not that our reasoning and perceptions are incomplete. Not only is this supported by experimental evidence (Hoffman) but also we can easily find scenarios where there are things we cannot detect that affect us, such as UV light. — khaled
So, what's wrong with having theories? — Metaphysician Undercover
Remember, you claimed that talking about "the reason that orders the world" is pointless. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are claiming that because our reasoning and perceptions are incomplete, we ought not make any effort toward completion. — Metaphysician Undercover
the only thing separating one theory from any other theory is Occam's razor. — khaled
And we only have access to the minds of others through the medium which is the physical world. Therefore we must have access to the physical world. — Metaphysician Undercover
For me this ties in with the principle/law of identity: any identity we can be aware of is itself an eidos and, as such, is cognized by us to be a whole give that, most always if not always, can be abstracted as being constituted of parts, with each identifiable part then itself, again, being an eidos. — javra
Husserl and Heidegger unravel the concept of self-present identity. — Joshs
Thus, your notion of form, eidos, whole is linked to identity as persisting presence to self, substance and res extentia. — Joshs
Husserl and Heidegger unravel the concept of self-present identity. — Joshs
(Actually I'm reading a very interesting philosophy of physics book, Nature Loves to Hide, Shimon Malin, which attempts to situate quantum physics in the broader context of Western classical philosophy. Pity you're not nearby, I'd lend it to you.) — Wayfarer
Yes, quite. Although there's a danger here of giving the sense that QM is a bottom-up theory of ignorance: it isn't. The version of QM that encodes such ignorance (density matrix theories) is mathematically distinct from QM, and will yield different experimental predictions. — Kenosha Kid
Quantum superposition is experimentally verifiable, so the wavefunction captures something ontological. — Kenosha Kid
In principle, relativistic quantum mechanics does away with this. Instead of capturing all possible paths from a given initial state, we capture all possible paths between a given initial state and a given final state. There is no need to represent an outcome that will not happen, nor to represent interference between trajectories toward outcomes that are orthogonal. — Kenosha Kid
So what's the alternative to Copenhagen? — frank
I hold that all interpretations of QM are just crutches that are better or worse at helping you along to the Zen realization that QM is what it is and doesn’t need an interpretation. As Sidney Coleman famously argued, what needs reinterpretation is not QM itself, but all our pre-quantum philosophical baggage—the baggage that leads us to demand, for example, that a wavefunction |ψ⟩ either be “real” like a stubbed toe or else “unreal” like a dream.
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You shouldn’t confuse the Zen Anti-Interpretation with “Shut Up And Calculate.” The latter phrase, mistakenly attributed to Feynman but really due to David Mermin, is something one might say at the beginning of the path, when one is as a baby. I’m talking here only about the endpoint of the path, which one can approach but never reach—the endpoint where you intuitively understand exactly what a Many-Worlder, Copenhagenist, or Bohmian would say about any given issue, and also how they’d respond to each other, and how they’d respond to the responses, etc. but after years of study and effort you’ve returned to the situation of the baby, who just sees the thing for what it is. — The Zen Anti-Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics - Scott Aaronson
I'm not quite clear on this point. Consider a MZI with equal arm lengths where the emitted photon always goes to the same detector. We would still need to add the amplitudes of the paths that go to the untriggered detector in order to make the correct predictions. — Andrew M
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