Another reason to stick with the MWI (as supported by Deutsch's work on quantum information/computing and generalization of "Wigner's Friend"). :wink:Oh, more pluralism, more diversity, yes, very clever. — Kenosha Kid
What does this mean? Some interpretations of quantum mechanics would be less compelling. The ontological Copenhagen interpretation is out. Many worlds is out, but not it's curious variant 'many minds' (in which there's no universal branching, rather the mind remains branched). Bohm and the epistemological Copenhagen interpretation look unaffected to me. — Kenosha Kid
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)
More broadly, can it really be that reality is subjective? It looks objective enough, but that's the classical limit at work. — Kenosha Kid
That said, Wigner and his friend aren't people in these experiments... Consciousness does not appear to be a prerequisite for having a unique external reality. Is it nothing more than localism, another relativism with another kind of reference frame? — Kenosha Kid
More broadly, can it really be that reality is subjective? — Kenosha Kid
Modern scientific method excludes or ‘brackets out’ the subject, so as to arrive at ‘the view from nowhere’, i.e. an understanding of reality that is as devoid of all traces of subjectivity. But in so doing it then forgets or overlooks the fact that knowledge of anything whatever always requires the judgement of an observing subject. — Wayfarer
you might measure whether the cat is alive or dead, even tell me you have made such a measurement, but you'd remain in a superposition of having measured both live and dead cat to me until I made my own measurement (of the cat or your results). — Kenosha Kid
Many worlds is out — Kenosha Kid
Many Worlds is fully compatible with Wigner's Friend. It's just a situation where worlds not only can split but also merge again under the right conditions. — Andrew M
Is not the above exactly what Many Worlds says happens? — Pfhorrest
Surely, if Alice reports to Bob that she observed that the cat is alive, Bob is not seeing Alice as in a superposition of having both observed the cat alive and observed the cat dead; Alice is observably in one of those states. — Pfhorrest
even tell me you have made such a measurement — Kenosha Kid
Also I think Copenhagen has always been epistemological despite talk of collapse. Per Bohr, — Andrew M
I've argued this before, but I think the usual Cartesian subjective/objective dichotomy is badly broken and not a useful way of thinking about the world. — Andrew M
Modern scientific method excludes or ‘brackets out’ the subject, so as to arrive at ‘the view from nowhere’, i.e. an understanding of reality that is as devoid of all traces of subjectivity. But in so doing it then forgets or overlooks the fact that knowledge of anything whatever always requires the judgement of an observing subject. — Wayfarer
the dream of some objective measuring framework is long dead. — Kenosha Kid
Yes — Wayfarer
Modern scientific method excludes or ‘brackets out’ the subject, so as to arrive at ‘the view from nowhere’ — Wayfarer
Special relativity killed off the idea that there's a special frame of reference for an ideal observer (a god's eye view) and quantum theory made it abundantly clear that observing an experiment makes you part of the experiment (gonzo science if you will). — Kenosha Kid
know that — Wayfarer
Wait, like SR, the QM framework is objective – subject-invariant – but just not universal (or absolute), no?But the dream of some objective measuring framework is long dead. — Kenosha Kid
Wait, like SR, the QM framework is objective – subject-invariant – but just not universal (or absolute), no? — 180 Proof
My preliminary read interprets "observer-dependent" as experimental set-up (subsystem)-dependent: different subsystems observe (measure) different aspects of the universe — 180 Proof
Objective pluralism and not subjective relativism — 180 Proof
doesn't the moon continue to exist when nobody's looking at it? — Wayfarer
A phenomenon is not a phenomenon until it has been brought to a close by an irreversible act of amplification such as the blackening of a grain of silver bromide emulsion or the triggering of a photodetector.
Minds are not required to bring things to a close: a molecule will do the job — Kenosha Kid
I was with Bohr on this, insofar as it seemed unwarranted to assume that a photon actually traversed any space at all between creation and destruction (photons are clicks in photon detectors). — Kenosha Kid
Nāgārjuna's philosophy is centred on the idea that nothing exists in itself. Everything exists only because of something else, in relation to something else. The term used by Nāgārjuna to describe this lack of essence is ‘emptiness’: things are ‘empty’ in the sense that they do not have an independent existence, they exist thanks to, on account of, in relation to, from the perspective of, something else”. — Carlos Rovelli
the dream of some objective measuring framework is long dead.
— Kenosha Kid
Yes
— Wayfarer
Then how come
Modern scientific method excludes or ‘brackets out’ the subject, so as to arrive at ‘the view from nowhere’
— Wayfarer
The whole of the modern scientific method doesn't sound very 'dead' to me. — Isaac
Traditionally, the discipline of Physics charts only the primary qualities of objects, events and processes i.e. their mathematical interrelations, where the relationship of their primary qualities to their secondary qualities (i.e. qualia) is ignored and undetermined. The reason why the secondary qualities are classically ignored by physics is as a consequence of traditional physics treating it's subject matter to be independent of any particular observer, which is itself due partly to convenience and simplification, and due partly as a consequence of the objective of physics to model the causal relationships that hold between action and consequence irrespective of the contextual nuances and discrepancies of any given observer.
Strictly speaking, the propositions of physics are senseless, like an unexecuted computer program, until as and when the propositions are used by an agent and thereby become grounded in the agent's perceptual apparatus in a bespoke fashion, at which point Locke's secondary qualities become temporarily welded to the physical concepts.
Classical physical concepts are therefore by design irreducible to mental concepts; something has been a central feature of physics rather than a bug, at least up until the discovery of special relativity and quantum mechanics, both of which show that even the Lockean primary qualities of objects are relative to perspective. — sime
No. Many Worlds is a subject relative branching. It's simply part of the universal wavefunction.No, many worlds is a universal branching. — Kenosha Kid
No. This is described exactly in the introduction of Everett's "The Theory of the Universal Wave Function". Using the terms in the introduction, (A + S) is the object-system for observer B; in terms of Wigner's friend, B would be Wigner and A would be his friend. MWI is the proposal that S is not collapsed when A measures S.When Wigner's friend measured the cat, the universal wavefunction would split then universally.
(underline mine; italics in the paper) ...just to show I'm not making this up. This is the fundamental assumption; the mechanics of branching are the mechanics of the wave function evolving via the Schrodinger equation ("Process 2"), not some new thing Everett came up with.Alternative 5: To assume the universal validity of the quantum description, by the complete abandonment of Process 1. The general validity of pure wave mechanics, without any statistical assertions, is assumed for all physical systems, including observers and measuring apparata. Observation processes are to be described completely by the state function of the composite system which includes the observer and his object-system, and which at all times obeys the wave equation (Process 2).
It was the classically modern scientific framework, I was referring to — Wayfarer
That has indeed begun to change — Wayfarer
the classically modern scientific framework — Wayfarer
excludes or ‘brackets out’ the subject, so as to arrive at ‘the view from nowhere’, — Wayfarer
No. Many Worlds is a subject relative branching. It's simply part of the universal wavefunction. — InPitzotl
Observation processes are to be described completely by the state function of the composite system which includes the observer and his object-system, and which at all times obeys the wave equation (Process 2).
(underline mine; italics in the paper) ...just to show I'm not making this up — InPitzotl
I think that is contestable. Registration, in that passage, is an 'act of measurement', not simply an interaction between any particles. — Wayfarer
It is the registration on the plate which changes that state of affairs, which seems to bring it into existence. That is what the many worlds interpretation seeks to avoid. — Wayfarer
Consciousness does not appear to be a prerequisite for having a unique external reality. Is it nothing more than localism, another relativism with another kind of reference frame? — Kenosha Kid
That's how I think of it. What you are (for us, human beings) and where you stand can make a difference to what you measure as we find with Einstein's theory of relativity. In the Wigner's Friend scenario, what Wigner measures (interference) is different to what the friend measures (a definite result). That just is the reality from their perspective. — Andrew M
But I don't see why objective approximations of the past would not be useful in approximate predictions of the future. Scientific approximations tend to improve in accuracy over time. — magritte
You're severely confused here. You're certainly not addressing what I purport. Keep the terms to ensure you're not conflating things.You're not making it up, but it doesn't say what you purport it to say, — Kenosha Kid
S has the radioactive substance in it. That decays or doesn't decay. A is Wigner's friend the cat; A either survives or dies. Yes, when A measures S, and S branches, A also branches.In MWI, when system A is entangled withsystem Bsystem S andsystem Bsystem S branches, system A also branches. — Kenosha Kid
B is Schrodinger(/Wigner). Schrodinger need not be entangled with the substance or the cat; when not entangled with either, Schrodinger sees W1+W2. Since that's possible, worlds are not universal.Observer-dependence tells us something different, that branching may have occurred forB and not for AA and not for B, even thoughA and B are entangledA and S are entangled. — Kenosha Kid
Schrodinger need not be entangled with the substance or the cat; Schrodinger sees W1+W2. — InPitzotl
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.