However, the equation is just one line. — TheMadFool
What I see is the problem how, math is a language, a perfectly sensible expression (equation of quantum superposition) in math when translated into another language (natural languages like English), most who do so end up with a contradiction? I can't wrap my head around that, sir/madam, as the case may be. — TheMadFool
The following rules apply to a quantum flip:
R1. quantum flip(heads) = heads + tails
R2. quantum flip(tails) = heads - tails
Applying this to the earlier experiment:
1. prepare: heads
2. quantum flip(heads) = heads + tails
3. quantum flip(heads + tails) = quantum flip(heads) + quantum flip(tails) = (heads + tails) + (heads - tails) = heads + heads
4. measure: heads — Andrew M
I'm not satisfied with your answer. Thank you for taking the trouble to explain it though. G'day. — TheMadFool
Can you please write that in the usual bra–ket notation?
Especially the minus sign in R2 is strange. — SolarWind
You're welcome! What in particular were you not satisfied with? — Andrew M
Do something similar with the equation for superposition (Schrödinger's?). — TheMadFool
It seems to me that you're thinking of a superposition as a kind of law (like F=ma). It's not. It's just a particular kind of state that a quantum system can be in. — Andrew M
Perhaps this is what you're looking for? — Andrew M
For example, if the wave function has amplitude (i.e., height or depth) at positions' 2 and 10 and those amplitudes are equal, then there is a 50% probability of finding the system at position 2 and a 50% probability of finding the system at position 10. This combination of potentially measurable positions prior to measurement is termed a superposition. — Andrew M
The question then is, is math invented or discovered? — TheMadFool
Obviously invented and projected upon physical reality. It's reasonable that math is effective. Math is derived from structures in the physical world. — GraveItty
Don't take derivation litterally, as if physical structures posses mathematical structures — GraveItty
Why would physical structures not possess mathematical structures. When I look at an ordinary die, I see a cube and when I look at the sun/moon, I see a sphere. — TheMadFool
It is their mathematical formulation and their abstraction in the mathematical realm (a mathematical sphere is a different sphere as a physical one) that they don't possess. — GraveItty
Only an approximation. — GraveItty
My point is that forms in the mathematical realm owe their existence to the physical reality. — GraveItty
Are you trying to say that, for instance, Brad Pitt, Albert Einstein, Abraham Lincoln, (basically men) are not men? — TheMadFool
Why can't it be the other way round? The physical seems to be obeying mathematical forms. — TheMadFool
I see, a Platonic point of view as far as I can tell. Did — TheMadFool
They are men without a mathematical equivalent somewhere because their mathematical equivalent doesn't exist — GraveItty
This question is exactly the reason I argued like I did and I answered it already. If a physical form (the drawn or imagined line) can't be expressed as a math formula, there is no counterpart of the form in the math space. — GraveItty
The place of math is simply the mind — GraveItty
What's nonmathematical about man? — TheMadFool
The question then is, is math invented or discovered? — TheMadFool
Math is derived from structures in the physical world. — GraveItty
There corresponds no exact mathematical form in the realm of math. — GraveItty
So what's my point? My point is that forms in the mathematical realm owe their existence to the physical reality. — GraveItty
It's a constraining and confining net thrown on physical reality, thereby darkening many facts — GraveItty
Such a wavefunction does not exist. Dirac deltas are not eigenfunctions. They are distributions. — GraveItty
Obviously invented and projected upon physical reality. It's reasonable that math is effective. Math is derived from structures in the physical world. — GraveItty
Originally perhaps. Not so much these days. Abstractions and generalizations abound. After many years I have concluded that math is both created and discovered. When I define a new (but tiny) math object, that is more creative than discovered. Afterwards one can discover what follows from such a definition. — jgill
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