Elementary particles contain the complete data of what they are. — Edgar L Owen
There is no 'faster than light' signal between particles. In the spin orientation example the spin orientations of both particles are determined when the particles are created. Must be for the spin orientation of the two particles to be conserved — Edgar L Owen
In the spin orientation example the spin orientations of both particles are determined when the particles are created. — Edgar L Owen
The spin orientation of both particles are not locally determined when the particles are created. That is the whole point of the Bell tests. The particle does not locally "know" what its spin is at creation. We have good experimental data to support this. — PhilosophyRunner
Would the input and output of a computer be considered a physical cause and effect? If so, then is the processing of information a causal event? What about you typing your posts (the effect) as being caused by your beliefs and your intent to communicate them? It seems to me that forcing the term "physical" into the discussion of causal events is what creates many of the problems that you are trying to solve.Again - For this thread I’d like to focus just on the meaning of the words “cause” or “causalty,” not on any other philosophical issues. Also, as I noted, I’d like the focus to be on physical causes. — T Clark
Experiments don't rule out non-local hidden variables. There are even experiments thinkable to decide if there are these things. — Haglund
Superdeterminism seems to include the choices made. Non-local hidden variables don't involve choices made. It are the objective variables and are the underlying mechanism leading to the observed chance behavior, like there are determining processes in the throwing of a dice. — Haglund
In order to find a loophole in the experiment, the hidden variable must include the experimenter. — PhilosophyRunner
Why? Non-local hidden variables exist without any observer — Haglund
It seems to me that forcing the term "physical" into the discussion of causal events is what creates many of the problems that you are trying to solve. — Harry Hindu
Another intractable problem with determinism is it implies a block time/block universe theory in which everything is predetermined in advance of it happening. How, pray tell, is a causally determined universe created prior to the actual causality that creates it? See the problem? — Edgar L Owen
Anyway, in my view, the notion of causality is an outmoded physicalist way of modeling the universe that simply refers to repeatable sequences of events that are actually computed instead of caused in any physical mechanistic sense. At this point I'll probably turn my attention to another thread. Thanks guys for the interesting discussion! — Edgar L Owen
The universe is a computational system that continually recomputes its current data state from its previous data state. Minds sample the universal data state as neural data structures in our brains and simulates it as the familiar 'physical' world we experience.
My model of how this happens is discussed in detail in my Complete Theory of Everything at https://EdgarLOwen.info — Edgar L Owen
Yes. The Bell tests. Bell invented them as he was an advocate of hidden variables (he couldn't imagine an observer, an experimenter with knowledge of QM) to cause collapse of the wavefunction in the past. The test doesn't rule out non-local HV, only local ones. And the non-local ones are needed to explain entanglement and global collapse of the wavefunction. — Haglund
Like I said in my post, the test rules out non local hidden variables, except if the experimenter is included in the determinism — PhilosophyRunner
The test just doesn't rule out non-local variables. It doesn't matter if you include the observer or not. If there was an entangled pair of electrons 13 billion years ago, then non-local hidden variables took care of the spins being non-causally related. If one of them interacted by spin, the other would automatically fall into one state. — Haglund
In your example, where is the non-local hidden variable? How does this variable communicate with the particles — PhilosophyRunner
Well, it could be that hidden variables constitute space. This would establish the connection between gravity and QM. So the space between and around two electrons connects them globally. Non causaly, without time involved. — Haglund
Time is not involved. There is no causal interaction between the electron spins. Space connects them globally without information going instantaneously or traveling in space. — Haglund
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.