Okay. Then what? What is the conclusion to this observation? Surely you don't mean this to be the conclusion.The physical world is a representation, an appearance, on the screen of perception, on the dashboard of dials. — Art48
“The physical world is not as the world as it is in itself. The physical world is a representation, an appearance, on the screen of perception, on the dashboard of dials. Physicality does not have standalone existence, a standalone reality, for exactly the same reason that the images on the screen do not have standalone reality.” — Art48
As I understand it, the soccer metaphor is meant to explain entanglement. The two entangles particles are analogous to the two views of the soccer game. The game itself is some higher or deeper reality that is somehow outside of space and time. Thus, in some sense, the two entangles particles naturally correspond because they are two different views of one thing.Okay. Then what? What is the conclusion to this observation? Surely you don't mean this to be the conclusion. — L'éléphant
I get your point. However, the examples of Donald Hoffman and the soccer metaphor are, to me, just variations of metaphysical views about perception. So, if I don't find these interesting, it's because I do understand the point, but not the motivation behind. Spacetime, for instance, has already been theorized as just mental construct that's limited in shape and form due to our finite existence. Nothing to gain by going against it.Note: I'm not arguing these ideas are true. But I think they are interesting and may be true, which is why I posted. — Art48
I realize that what I've just written seems like nothing but two paragraphs of blah blah blah. — L'éléphant
Where would you consider more appropriate?There's something comical about presuming to give lessons of this kind on YouTube. — Ciceronianus
Where would you consider more appropriate? — Art48
We're in the world. We're part of reality. It isn't something separate from us, that we observe. But this is old stuff. — Ciceronianus
The soccer game metaphor is presented from 5:00 to about 16:37. Imagine a soccer game as reality, as the thing in itself. The physical world is likened to seeing the game on TV, on two different TV channels using two different TV monitors. Each TV channel uses its own camera so the images on the two TV monitors correspond but are not identical. — Art48
The two TVs represent the two measurements. The reality is the soccer match. Obviously, the images on the two TVs have to correlate as they represent two views of a single reality. I think the point he is making is that there's a deeper reality than the physical world and therefore it's no surprise if two measurements correspond.Also, the metaphor of the soccer match and TV's also doesn't end up addressing entanglement. There's really a soccer match. And the TV's (also real!) receive a local signal. No mystery there. — Andrew M
Isn't it the case that we know they do not have predefined values (unless we accept the pilot wave, Bohmian Mechanics interpretation)?they could easily have had predefined values. No big deal. — Andrew M
The two TVs represent the two measurements. The reality is the soccer match. Obviously, the images on the two TVs have to correlate as they represent two views of a single reality. I think the point he is making is that there's a deeper reality than the physical world and therefore it's no surprise if two measurements correspond. — Art48
Isn't it the case that we know they do not have predefined values (unless we accept the pilot wave, Bohmian Mechanics interpretation)? — Art48
Suppose we have two spinning coins, separated by light years. Suppose if Alice causes her coin to stop spinning (analogous to doing a measurement) and it lands heads, that Bob causes his coin to stop spinning and it lands tails. Suppose Bob's coin always lands on the reverse side as Alice's coin. This is my metaphor for quantum entanglement as I understand it. Comments? — Art48
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