And the rest of the article is here:Does Quantum Mechanics Rule Out Free Will?
Superdeterminism, a radical quantum hypothesis, says our “choices” are illusory
March 10, 2022
A conjecture called superdeterminism, outlined decades ago, is a response to several peculiarities of quantum mechanics: the apparent randomness of quantum events; their apparent dependence on human observation, or measurement; and the apparent ability of a measurement in one place to determine, instantly, the outcome of a measurement elsewhere, an effect called nonlocality.
Einstein, who derided nonlocality as “spooky action at a distance,” insisted that quantum mechanics must be incomplete; there must be hidden variables that the theory overlooks. Superdeterminism is a radical hidden-variables theory proposed by physicist John Bell. He is renowned for a 1964 theorem, now named after him, that dramatically exposes the nonlocality of quantum mechanics.
Bell said in a BBC interview in 1985 that the puzzle of nonlocality vanishes if you assume that “the world is superdeterministic, with not just inanimate nature running on behind-the-scenes clockwork, but with our behavior, including our belief that we are free to choose to do one experiment rather than another, absolutely predetermined.”
[ ... ] — John Horgan, SciAm_Opinion
Or maybe not. I might question some of it.Maybe this article, TiredThinker, you'll find useful: — 180 Proof
This has never been demonstrated. No experiment behaves differently with a human observer than the same experiment without one. In fact, almost all quantum experiments are performed without human observation, and it is only well after the fact that the humans become aware of the results in analysis of the data.their apparent dependence on human observation — John Horgan, SciAm_Opinion
This nonlocality also has never been demonstrated, else all the local interpretations (about half of the interpretations) would have been falsified.or measurement; and the apparent ability of a measurement in one place to determine, instantly, the outcome of a measurement elsewhere, an effect called nonlocality.
This totally misrepresents Bell's theorem, which proves that locality and counterfactual definiteness cannot both be true. It does not demonstrate that either is false, Superdeterminism is a loophole in the proof, suggesting that there are very much experiments that would show both to be true, but we (and any device) lack the free will (or even randomness) to perform them.Superdeterminism is a radical hidden-variables theory proposed by physicist John Bell. He is renowned for a 1964 theorem, now named after him, that dramatically exposes the nonlocality of quantum mechanics.
I just read, in Stephen Nadler's A Book Forged in Hell, about Spinoza's concept of divine determinism, as evidenced by reliable (consistent ; unvarying) natural laws. "Spinoza's cosmos is, in other words, a strictly deterministic, even necessitarian one. Everything, without exception, is causally determined to be such as it is . . . " To me, that sounds like "superdeterminism", or perhaps super-natural-determinism. But since Spinoza's day, empirical Science has found that, ironically, on the most fundamental scale, nature seems to be random & acausal*1. Fortunately, on the macro level of reality, the aimless vectors of quantum chaos cancel-out to present the superficial appearance of an unbroken chain of cause & effect*2. Which allows us to predict future events, at least statistically & locally.Bell said in a BBC interview in 1985 that the puzzle of nonlocality vanishes if you assume that “the world is superdeterministic, with not just inanimate nature running on behind-the-scenes clockwork, but with our behavior, including our belief that we are free to choose to do one experiment rather than another, absolutely predetermined.” — John Horgan, SciAm_Opinion
Excellent book on Spinoza's first (minor) masterwork. :fire:Stephen Nadler's A Book Forged in Hell
In fact, almost all quantum experiments are performed without human observation, and it is only well after the fact that the humans become aware of the results in analysis of the data. — noAxioms
Sure. This is the basis for the Wigner interpretation, which Wigner himself abandoned because it necessarily leads to solipsism.Wouldn't that just mean the results could be in a superpositioned state until some human makes an observation? — Marchesk
Sort of I guess. Superposition by definition means that the two states measurably interfere with each other, but there's no way you're going to get a live-cat system to interfere with a dead-cat system. They've done it with macroscopic objects (large enough to see unaided), but there's no way to prevent decoherence of a cat in a box no matter how technologically advanced your box is.That's the basis of Schrodinger's criticism of the Copenhagen Interpretation, but how would we rule it out?
Einstein didn't believe in free will or at least had doubts? I thought he was a religion person talking about "God not playing dice" and what not. — TiredThinker
free will as indicated by the experimenters' liberty to choose what to measure, which experiments to perform — Agent Smith
That sounds about right to me. Scientists freely determine the bounds and setup of controlled observation and analysis. In between, the experiment proceeds in the physical world in real time independent of humans. Experimental details are indeterminate to start until analysis succeeds in sifting planned or fortuitous often statistical information from the data. So the simplified question becomes what small part of nature can be described by any logic.
What would nature do in our absence, could there possibly be any conditions for either determinism or free will? — magritte
What would nature do in our absence, could there possibly be any conditions for either determinism or free will? — magritte
In this case I merely paraphrased Wikipedia! :lol: — Agent Smith
No matter. :cool: I just posed a question to think about. Philosophy is all about missing questions not 'truth'. It's aporia. — magritte
If time doesn't flow and the future already happened, is reality superdeterministic? — litewave
It's not actually, since makes several incorrect assumptions.This a very good philosophical question indeed. — javi2541997
1) In an interpretation where time doesn't flow, the concept of an event having 'happened' is meaningless.If time doesn't flow and the future already happened, is reality superdeterministic? — litewave
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