You don't see where God and evolution enter into the realm of fundamental beliefs that conflict with scientific evidence? Curious... — Kenosha Kid
I'm talking about the interpretation. — Cartuna
You just asked about evidence. Try and at least follow your _own_ end of the discussion. — Kenosha Kid
Do you mean I have to stop questioning the orthodoxy? — Cartuna
There is no scientific evidence for the orthodoxy. I defend a hidden variables view. — Cartuna
what does it mean in that context? That I have a chance of ending up in following parallel worlds? Which makes it still hard to believe though that mass is conserved, but you can distribute it nicely. — Cartuna
I've already given an example: the electric moment of ground state hydrogen. — Kenosha Kid
No, you're not scientifically unorthodox, you're ascientific: your beliefs concerning nature are not impinged by scientific facts. — Kenosha Kid
I've already given an example: the electric moment of ground state hydrogen. — Kenosha Kid
I'm not sure you quite grasp MWI, or superposed states generally. Even if no branching occurs, and a particle's superposition of being here or there remains coherent, it still has a mass. You don't need branching or collapse to encounter issues like superposition. — Kenosha Kid
In Bohmian mechanics, in the ground state of hydrogen, the electron is at rest relative to the proton. — SolarWind
However, the electric dipole is not measurable, since any approach of an electric charge immediately sets the electron in motion. — SolarWind
That's untrue even in Bohmian mechanics. The electron is still moving, the relevant point is there should be a time-dependent electric dipole from the two separated charges. — Kenosha Kid
There is just no scientific evidence the orthodox view is the correct one. — Cartuna
The ground state of hydrogen has no electric moment (maybe if you could shake the proton, which would imply that the state is not a groundstate anymore though, like shaking the electron), but even if it had this would not constitute evidence. — Cartuna
I already mentioned this. If an electron hops erratically like a Brownian particle, you would expect an EM field to come out of the wavefunction. — Cartuna
But there ia no continuous flow of current. — Cartuna
Obviously there is, since consensus in science is built around evidence. Where there is no evidence, there is no orthodoxy. The correct interpretation of QM is still up for grabs, but that doesn't mean that any theory is as good as any other. One example is that God selects outcomes of quantum events. — Kenosha Kid
That is the evidence, since in hidden variables theories like Bohmian mechanics, it _should_ have a dipole moment: two charges separated by space makes a dipole. — Kenosha Kid
An EM field exists whether it's static or moving. That's what charge ensures. Where do you get this stuff? Hearing Brownian motion come up makes me think you're just grabbing at physics concepts at random in order to keep speaking for the sake of speaking. — Kenosha Kid
But there ia no continuous flow of current.
— Cartuna
Orbital angular momentum? Spin? — Kenosha Kid
A measurement causes collapse though. — Cartuna
This should cause EM radiation, which isn't observed in a double slit experiment with electrons, like there is no electric moment observed for s-orbitals in atoms. — Cartuna
The medium in which the particle flows represents the wavefunction which litterally makes the Brownian move erratically and seemingly randomly. — Cartuna
An electron in an s-orbital has no angular momentum, and to associate spin with a continuous flow of current flies in the face of all modern conceptions of spin. — Cartuna
In collapse interpretations only — Kenosha Kid
No, it shouldn't cause EM radiation. Collapse simply changes the state amplitudes. You're back to thinking that physical properties themselves are somehow split. When collapse takes you from a*E1 + b*E2, for instance, there's no transition from E2 to E1. That wouldn't be collapse, that would be a process. — Kenosha Kid
There's no randomness in Bohm, that's the point. There's _chaotic_ behaviour: which trajectory the pilot wave forces the particle is extremely mesensitive to small, hidden differences in initial state, but is deterministic. — Kenosha Kid
That's precisely where the magnetic moment of a charged particle comes from. — Kenosha Kid
That's the one I'm talking about. Bohmian mechanics. — Cartuna
That's exactly where it doesn't come from. — Cartuna
Not upset, just not averse to calling a spade a spade, — Kenosha Kid
I'm not sure what poker has got to do with this discussion though. — Cartuna
the temptation is to throw good money after bad, to feel pot committed. — Kenosha Kid
The analogy is with continuing to engage with someone long after you've realised they're not bound by normal debate conventions — Kenosha Kid
like knowing or caring wtf they're talking about. — Kenosha Kid
Although "bullshit" is a recognised technical term here. I think Banno knows the origin. — Kenosha Kid
Detection only requires the particle to collide with a physical system. All this 'observer determines outcome' is bunkum. — EnPassant
Is the wave function collapsed or not? — SolarWind
I think the collapse of the wave function is only a manner of speaking. — EnPassant
It's probably going to go the way of the ether though, just an idea dead people once believed in out of ignorance. — Kenosha Kid
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