There are no hidden variables in RQM, and humans do not play any preferred role.
— noAxioms
How do you know there are no hidden variables?
— EugeneW
I didn't say there are no hidden variables — noAxioms
Bohm's efforts seem a desperate attempt to explain quantum mechanics in classical terms as if classical physics is the more fundamental of the two.
The interpretation ( — noAxioms
as if classical physics is the more fundamental of the two. — noAxioms
You seem to mix bits from RQM, Copenhagen, and Bohmian mechanics — noAxioms
Are you referring to traveling analogue waves — universeness
As a maths expert, do you have anything to add that would aid my understanding of the difference between the terms wave /function/form/equation as they are used in maths compared to quantum physics? — universeness
If you understand the wavefunction, then you should understand this. If you put cards parallel to the screen (in the double slit experiment) you would see the wavefunction (as on the screen). I don't think the particle travels on all paths at once. It rather jumps from one to the other, within the confines of the wavefunction the wavefunction accompanied the particle — EugeneW
And this, as t=time progresses, describes a wave in the complex plane. — jgill
You say it 'jumps from path to path.' This idea is just as confusing for me. How would 'jumping' allow a single electron to pass through both slits? — universeness
Physics concerns what one expects to measure. Metaphysics concerns what is. — noAxioms
Hey, Right back at you!Hey, whatever floats your boat — noAxioms
I don't think human consciousness is an assembly of components. More of a process that takes place, like combustion, involving not necessarily the same matter at any given time, just like a candle flame's atoms are almost completely different than the 'same flame' a minute later. — noAxioms
They've been measured, so they exist to us by that definition. They're galaxies, and separate galaxies might merge into bigger ones, but they hardly just cease being there after only several billion years — noAxioms
imagine you are that particle; you're here and the next on the other side of the slit, instantaneously, without delay!) — EugeneW
Thinking about and discussing QM with others will remain good practice and good fun, if somewhat frustrating, but I think we probably need another million years of science and scientists before we 'know.' — universeness
So not all paths are taken at once but parts of paths — EugeneW
Bohm was ridiculed for it. — EugeneW
Yeah, its hard to judge someone like Bohm but he suffered badly from depression and he was friends with some mystic called Jiddu something. — universeness
This is false. One would need to assume certain unprovable postulates (*cough* biases *cough*) to demonstrate this.As a matter of fact, experiments can be done to discern if [hidden variables] exist or not. — EugeneW
I don't. I see an interpretation that attempts to get as close as possible to classical intuitions at whatever cost in additional complexity. I prefer the simpler ones (Occam's razor and all), but I am not so naive as to assert any particular interpretation as 'the truth'.You see hidden variables as classical variables? — EugeneW
You say this stuff like it is fact, when it is only your personal opinion, which is misleading when replying to one who is trying to learn. Last I checked, Bohm does not suggest that the electron goes through one slit and then hops to the other. It takes one path in that interpretation.Confusing indeed! Let's say the electron just explores all possible paths to reach for other particles to interact with. It goes through one slit and during this transgress it hops to the other. — EugeneW
But has anybody proven him wrong? The pilot wave tank thing died a horrible death, but the interpretation lives on.Bohm was mocked — EugeneW
That's like saying the cat is both dead and alive. It isn't. The electron is said to be in superposition of going through each slit, and the cat is in superposition of being dead and alive. Even then, the latter is wrong since superposition requires a coherent state: the electron states in superposition can interfere with each other and produce a measurable interference pattern. The live cat cannot measurably interfere with the dead cat, and so it not a true superposition.So Feynmann suggested that each single electron passes through both slits and effectively 'interferes with itself'. — universeness
If I am looking for my coffee, and see it sitting on the counter, that's a measurement. That I infer that the cup is actually over there is a metaphysical conclusion, but one that works very well for me, so it's second nature in everyday life. Physics says that if I actually go there and reach for the cup, I'd expect it to be measured by my hand when I do that, but physics actually says that that expectation can be made regardless of the metaphysical overhead.Physics makes predictions of the results of a particular experiment but it then accepts the actual results as what is. — universeness
What something looks like is what you see if you look at it. Galaxies are huge and take ages to change. I assure you it that it still looks like that now from here. Sure, you move a few billion light years in some direction and point the telescope the same way, the view will look different. The picture is definitely dependent on point of view and looks different from significantly elsewhere.They're galaxies, and separate galaxies might merge into bigger ones, but they hardly just cease being there after only several billion years
— noAxioms
Well, it might have been more accurate for me to say that the print in my room of that area of space looks nothing like that anymore.
This is false. One would need to assume certain unprovable postulates (*cough* biases *cough*) to demonstrate this — noAxioms
Bohm does not suggest that the electron goes through one slit and then hops to the other. It takes one path in that interpretation. — noAxioms
Bohm was mocked
— EugeneW
But has anybody proven him wrong? — noAxioms
Bohm was mocked "a hopeless fool", "aTrotskyte", a "communist conspiricist", "a traitor"... How can one not sympathize with his ideas?
Seems he is the modern Galilei. In a modern church — EugeneW
Yeah, but why did he turn to characters like Jiddu Krishnamurti — universeness
It's a thin distinction, but an important one to me. I named myself 'noAxioms' precisely because there's nothing I refuse to question. I've a long list of things that pretty much everybody believes (including myself) which are nevertheless lacking in hard evidence. The result is a conflict: I believe some things that I know to be likely false, as if there are multiple entities in me with conflicting ideas, and only one of them can be in charge — noAxioms
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