Because we believe in the uniformity of nature — Srap Tasmaner
the unity of science. — Srap Tasmaner
And yes of course there are differences between how a crowd of 50,000 behaves and how a group of 5 behaves. Yes, scale matters. But it should be explicable how you crossover from one scale to the next — even if there is no simple, non-fuzzy boundary. — Srap Tasmaner
Anyhow, that's why at least one person (me) would think that wouldn't be true, based entirely on my assumptions and with hardly any knowledge of quantum theory at all. I've just never understood the "it's just a matter of scale" view — as if Mother Nature checks the size of what she's dealing with and then picks the appropriate rule-book to follow for that size object. That leaves the events at different scales isolated from each other in a way I find incomprehensible. — Srap Tasmaner
QM is not a matter of "different rules for small things." — frank
Yes, this is the view I find incomprehensible because the whole point is that our big stable things supervene upon the small unstable things. It's not like we can keep them in separate rooms with separate rules, like the rooms of a preschool. — Srap Tasmaner
Just to clarify, in terms of our folk notions of reality, QM goes far beyond saying that things work differently on a small scale. QM suggests that there is no distinct reality outside measurement events (which don't require consciousness, but human activity is a kind of measurement.)
So when you say physicists are realists, that doesn't necessarily answer the OP. If the OP had some sort of Newtonian picture of the world, then the answer is yes, QM says that a fair portion of that absolute realm is not real. — frank
There are so many variants of realism that different philosophers adhere to that it is possible to accommodate QM within one or more of them. — Joshs
As far as the quotes in the OP making what is observed dependent on the existence of the observer, this shows an assimilation of Kant’s work on noumenon and phenomenon , concept and sensation, and the inaccessibility of the thing in itself. — Joshs
Though on the off side...does it really say that? From what I've been told there are so many interpretations of QM that you can pretty much just have it say whatever you want. — Darkneos
The Copenhagen interpretation (especially John von Neumann's view) is not Kant. There is no thing in itself. There is no determinate thing prior to wave function collapse, and we have a clear idea of the math that describes what's there prior to collapse. — frank
:100: :fire:And science clearly is not unified. We have broken it down into a hierarchical list of different sciences depending on scale and principle of organization. There have been long discussions of that hierarchy here on the forum. I think the important message is that reductionism works - each higher level behaves consistently with the level below - but constructivism doesn't - you can't generally predict behavior at a higher level from principles of the lower level. Example - you can't predict the behavior of biology from chemistry. — T Clark
Now look who's talking down ... Projection is a hell of a drug. :roll:Here, look at me being helpful to you: — frank
That quote isn't saying that Bohr was influenced by Kant. It's just saying people have noticed parallels — frank
The point is that these authors believe there is strong overlap in their ideas. You apparently disagree. — Joshs
It says that and also speculates on “a direct Kantian influence on Bohr”. So it is suggesting both.
— Joshs
Didn't exactly demonstrate that, did it? — frank
He provides evidence that Bohr was an entity realist
— Joshs
Could you explain what that means? — frank
entity realism" asserts the real existence of unobserved entities. — Joshs
The fact they link to experiments and science sites and I just have your word. — Darkneos
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