Yes, we humans are essentially "abstract mathematical objects"*1 in space-time. I have arrived at a similar conclusion, except I typically use a more general term for reference to both the subjective objects of minds, and the objective things of physical senses : Information. From a scientific perspective, Mathematics*2 may be the fundamental aspect (essence) of reality. But, for Philosophical purposes Information*3 may be more broadly applicable. Math seems to be the most abstract form of Generic Information*4, yet it is the logical structure of the physical world.Which suggests that reality—that me, you, Earth, universe, etc.—is fundamentally some sort of abstract object*1 existing outside spacetime. Hm. — Art48
This makes no sense to me. A category error at least. "Existing" north of the North Pole ... :roll:reality—that me, you, Earth, universe, etc.—is fundamentally some sort of abstract object existing outside spacetime. — Art48
We have quantum entanglement, which says that signals can travel faster than light. — Art48
The contradiction can be resolved if we restate Einstein’s relativity theory as “nothing can travel through spacetime faster than light.” If the signals somehow bypass spacetime, then the contradiction is resolved. Hm. — Art48
When we drill down to the deepest level of matter, we get the quantum wavefunction, a mathematical object that uses regular numbers (“real” numbers) and “complex” numbers which are based on “i”, the square root of negative one. We begin with matter, trace its source, and end up with a complex-valued mathematical wavefunction — Art48
You'll get some negative feedback for that assertion. Actually, at first experimenters were baffled by the "entanglement effect" which seemed to imply faster than light communication. Since then though, other explanations for the instantaneous correlation between particles have been proposed. I'm not a physicist, so I prefer a model that fits into my personal information-theoretic worldview. From that perspective, there is no movement of matter, energy, or information between entangled particles. Instead, the opposite spins are metaphorically two sides of one particle. And all particles in the universe are non-local & unreal (virtual) until triggered by an interaction to manifest with physical properties. In other words, the world is a single holistic (non-space-time) reservoir of infinite Potential, until transformed into Actual bits of matter/energy. The particle doesn't have to go anywhere, because it's already there.We have quantum entanglement, which says that signals can travel faster than light. — Art48
Does it make sense to you that our deepest description of matter is the wavefunction?reality—that me, you, Earth, universe, etc.—is fundamentally some sort of abstract object existing outside spacetime. — Art48
This makes no sense to me. — 180 Proof
"Deepest description" so far ... Why wouldn't that "make sense"?Does it make sense to you that our deepest description of matter is the wavefunction? — Art48
This question, Art, doesn't make much sense. What else would / should "the wavefunction" be if not a mathematical function?Does it make sense that the wavefunction is a mathematical function?
Another incoherent question. Abstract objects subsist in minds and minds exist – are embodied – spatiotemporally.Does is make sense that mathematical functions exists outside spacetime?
We have quantum entanglement, which says that signals can travel faster than light. — Art48
[From Physics Stack Exchange] Entanglement between two qubits means that if a measurement is made on one of them, the other one is decided instantaneously.
This is true, but this does not allow for faster than light communication. If you have one qubit with you and I have one qubit with me and you make a measurement on your qubit, that will mean my qubit is decided . But how does that send any signal ?
Later on, when I make a measurement on my qubit, I get a measurement, just as I would have got some measurement had you not measured first. There is no way for me to know that I got this measurement after you had measured yours or before you have measured yours. Hence, no signal can be sent faster than light using entanglement — universeness
I tried to understand quantum entanglement using my own following thought experiment:
If the distance between us was 1 light year. Then I could send you a message that says.
Measure your entangled particle the moment you receive this message.
I would then have to know very precisely (I think) when to measure my item just before you do, 1 light year away. I would then send a message to you 1 light year away, asking you what your measurement was. If I had measured a 1 then you will have read a 0.
But it will take 2 years after the actual event, for me to confirm this, so no signal is travelling faster than light in this thought experiment.
I don't know if this is correct but it's what I understand as quantum entanglement at the moment. — universeness
Does it make sense to you that our deepest description of matter is the wavefunction? — Art48
That's correct. But note that, per relativity of simultaneity, the order of the measurements can potentially differ in each particle's reference frame. The point is that each measurement is local. One measurement doesn't cause or influence the other measurement. — Andrew M
Good point. Some philosophers say that material objects exist but abstract objects subsist.Does is make sense that mathematical functions exists outside spacetime?
Another incoherent question. Abstract objects subsist in minds and minds exist – are embodied – spatiotemporally. — 180 Proof
Does it make sense to you now?reality—that me, you, Earth, universe, etc.—is fundamentally some sort of abstract object SUBSISTING outside spacetime. — Art48
This makes no sense to me. — 180 Proof
Does it make sense to you that our deepest description of matter is the wavefunction?
Does it make sense that the wavefunction is a mathematical function?
Does is make sense that mathematical functions SUBSIST outside spacetime? — Art48
We have quantum entanglement, which says that signals can travel faster than light. — Art48
No, quantum entanglement says measurements will be correlated - a very different thing. As physicist Asher Peres noted, "relativistic quantum field theory is manife — Andrew M
No. But I did look at another of his long essays, and he seems to be generally well-informed. In this thread, I'm only responding to the concepts expressed in this thread, not to Art's book. I'm aware that some of his ideas are fringey, but so are mine. That's why I try to encourage him to explore beyond the known into terra incognita, despite negative feedback.↪Gnomon
Have you looked at ↪Art48's book? What do you make of it? — Banno
No. "Outside spacetime" is as incoherent as north of the North Pole. And to subsist is to be thought by minds which are, as I've pointed out already, embodied spatiotemporally; so the question remains doubly nonsensical to me.Does is make sense that mathematical functions SUBSIST outside spacetime?
— Art48
Does it make sense to you now? — Art48
OK, I suppose that's one view of abstract objects. Another view is that theyNo. "Outside spacetime" is as incoherent as north of the North Pole. And to subsist is to be thought by minds which are, as I've pointed out already, embodied spatiotemporally; so the question remains doubly nonsensical to me. — 180 Proof
That's why I try to encourage him to explore beyond the known into terra incognita, despite negative feedback. — Gnomon
Sure. And philosophers tend to be good at "making sh*t up". Some of it turns out to be pragmatically useful, in which case science takes over to make use of the ideas. And this forum is an arena for presenting ideas to a wide variety of critical eyes. Some here find Hegel's ideas useful for their insights into the "teleology of history", while others find fault for the same "sh*t". Suum cuique."To each his own"Put otherwise, anyone can make shit up. We need an evaluative eye that can spot the crap. . . . Along side a desire for stories of breadth and completeness, we need to foster a critical attitude. That seems to be missing here. — Banno
It is far more direct and reasonable to posit that abstractions such as property, marriage, and complex numbers are stuff we made up than to imagine them exiting in the way chairs and trees do, but in some parallel reality. — Banno
Was mathematics invented or discovered? :
Both discovered and invented — Gnomon
:up: But if the two items 1 light year apart are entangled, then surely "However, if the events are causally connected, precedence order is preserved in all frames of reference." From the wikipedia article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relativity_of_simultaneity applies? — universeness
In quantum field theory, observables of events with a spacelike relationship, "elsewhere", have to commute, so the order of observations or measurements of such observables do not impact each other. — Causality (physics) - Wikipedia
My understanding is that Einstein's famous "spooky action at a distance" concern was about something going faster than the speed of light. — Art48
Locality is one of the axioms of relativistic quantum field theory, as required for causality. The formalization of locality in this case is as follows: if there are two observables, each localized within two distinct spacetime regions which happen to be at a spacelike separation from each other, the observables must commute. Alternatively, a solution to the field equations is local if the underlying equations are either Lorentz invariant or, more generally, generally covariant or locally Lorentz invariant. — Principle of locality - Wikipedia
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