In that case, nothing to discuss. — Wayfarer
There is no privileged, "real" account. — Relational quantum mechanics
Science went searching for the ultimate basis of matter, and this is what it found. — Wayfarer
I can't get my head around why someone would come on to a public forum and then not do the one thing the forum is designed to do, — Isaac
The reason it’s pointless to debate you, is because you have a fundamentally positivist attitude which is never going to be shifted by anything I have to say. — Wayfarer
I'm not sure whether we're referring to the same experiment. — Andrew M
So the upshot is that the friend has made a definite measurement and reported that she has done so to Wigner, without telling him what the result was. At the same time the lab remains in superposition for Wigner, per your (B). — Andrew M
So tell me what's wrong with this pluralism/relativism conception or why it doesn't work for interpreting fundamental physics. — 180 Proof
Not annoyed, but thank you for the thought. :smirk:And most of all, is this just a ruse to shoehorn in a third pomo-friendly thread to annoy ssu? Oh, more pluralism, more diversity, yes, very clever. (It's not, honest.) — Kenosha Kid
Not annoyed, but thank you for the thought. — ssu
It seems to me that in the MWI 'observers and observations' are identical.MWI doesn't help here because it branches on observations, not observers. — Kenosha Kid
Pluralism:Relativism — Kenosha Kid
It seems to me that in the MWI observers and observations are identical. — 180 Proof
Pluralism:
"The cat is dead" is true for Wigner's friend but not for Wigner.
is equivalent to
"The cat is dead [is true] for Wigner's friend" — magritte
We did this little dance a while backI actually had moral pluralism versus relativism in mind when I asked ... — Kenosha Kid
My brain's not working hard enough to grok this. You seem to me to be imposing an instrumentalist interpretation on the MWI realism. :confused: — 180 Proof
We did this little dance a while back — 180 Proof
In each of these branches, Wigner then comes along and measures his friend's results. — Kenosha Kid
Can you at least look it up on Wikipedia or something? — Kenosha Kid
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Many-worlds_interpretationIn 1985, David Deutsch proposed a variant of the Wigner's friend thought experiment as a test of many-worlds versus the Copenhagen interpretation. It consists of an experimenter (Wigner's friend) making a measurement on a quantum system in an isolated laboratory, and another experimenter (Wigner) who would make a measurement on the first one. According to the many-worlds theory, the first experimenter would end up in a macroscopic superposition of seeing one result of the measurement in one branch, and another result in another branch. The second experimenter could then interfere these two branches in order to test whether it is in fact in a macroscopic superposition or has collapsed into a single branch, as predicted by the Copenhagen interpretation. Since then Lockwood (1989), Vaidman and others have made similar proposals. These proposals require placing macroscopic objects in a coherent superposition and interfering them, a task now beyond experimental capability. — Many-Worlds interpretation
Does not every observation, as an interaction, cause entanglement? (Leaving room still for partial observation; see below). — Pfhorrest
Is this while Wigner and his friend are already entangled? — Pfhorrest
I’m getting the sense that this new evidence is of the possibility of SOME information from inside the box being communicated to the friend without it being enough of the right information to collapse the wavefunction — Pfhorrest
It's not as simple as reversing these terms. Science is already a 'defeasible (hypothetical / statistical) metaphysics of reality' which must be accounted for, in order to be self-consistent, by a more general, indefeasible (categorical / modal) metaphysics of the real. Even 'fundamental sciences' can no more ground themselves than Rovelli (I'm a huge fan, btw) can rewrite his own/the past; physics is a 'mapmaking map' but is not the territory itself or the encompassing horizon.... we should let the science say what the metaphysics is, not let our metaphysics guide our science — Manuel
So the upshot is that the friend has made a definite measurement and reported that she has done so to Wigner, without telling him what the result was. At the same time the lab remains in superposition for Wigner, per your (B).
— Andrew M
But at this point at the very latest Wigner and his friend should be entangled as they are exchanging information, i.e. they are not two independently evolving systems. — Kenosha Kid
I’m getting the sense that this new evidence is of the possibility of SOME information from inside the box being communicated to the friend without it being enough of the right information to collapse the wavefunction
— Pfhorrest
Yes, and maybe this is what Andrew had in mind too. — Kenosha Kid
Wigner and his friend don't become entangled because the friend is sending exactly the same piece of information to Wigner from both branches, i.e., that a definite result has been obtained. — Andrew M
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