Well, duh! How could there be? That's like saying there are no cows in a book about cows.There is no "time itself" in physics, — Metaphysician Undercover
Seems pretty real to me when I have to go anywhere. And if it is just a feature of the measurement system, then what is he measurement system measuring?"space" is just a feature of the measurement system, the map. — Metaphysician Undercover
Really? No part that corresponds? Then what is the coordinate system coordinating?but there is no part of the physical universe which corresponds with the coordinate system. — Metaphysician Undercover
Seems pretty real to me when I have to go anywhere. And if it is just a feature of the measurement system, then what is he measurement system measuring? — tim wood
Really? No part that corresponds? Then what is the coordinate system coordinating?
A radical idea! You could try making sense! You could start with your claims as I've listed in this post! That is, no time, no space, no physical universe. Don't worry, I'll breathe. — tim wood
Are you suggesting that movement absent air is not possible?When you go places, do you think you move through space? You are actually moving through air, i think. — Metaphysician Undercover
Time for you to define "space" and "time." If we only measure distance, what does distance refer to?We do not measure space. The same is the case with time, — Metaphysician Undercover
This was an assignment in a science class, to mark the point of sunrise on the horizon from a fixed point across a few months, demonstrating that the location of the sun's mounting the horizon moves through the year quite a bit. Now, I find more than a few problems with your question, but we can start with this: how is a place/location not real? Is the mark not real? is the location it refers to not real? is the phenomenon demonstrated - and the way it is demonstrated - not real? Let's add "real" to the list of words you need to define.Notice, that this mark does not refer to any real, independent object whatsoever, it refers to a place, a location. In what way would you agree, or disagree, that there is nothing real in the physical world which this mark on the map refers to? — Metaphysician Undercover
??? Or a paraphrase? Because our reality may be subjective, there is no absolute reality? Really? Care to offer a proof?so what we term 'reality' may only really be our subjective reality and bear no resemblance to the truth. What is the term? 'You can't handle the truth?' So, if there is no absolute reality, — Richard Townsend
You appear to have forgotten the magic phrase, "I (we) don't know." Without it, you're in trouble. For example, "I cannot (do not know how to) drive that car," and, "That car cannot be driven." Big difference, and I assume you see the potential for trouble.For example, how else may entanglement be explained within our current framework of spacetime? It can't, — Richard Townsend
Can, I suppose, but must? The enthusiasm of your ideas seems to have outdistanced your thinking.the human 'biological measuring instrument' plays a crucial part since it forms part of a causal chain which yields the final result. — Richard Townsend
Are you suggesting that movement absent air is not possible? — tim wood
Time for you to define "space" and "time." If we only measure distance, what does distance refer to? — tim wood
This was an assignment in a science class, to mark the point of sunrise on the horizon from a fixed point across a few months, demonstrating that the location of the sun's mounting the horizon moves through the year quite a bit. Now, I find more than a few problems with your question, but we can start with this: how is a place/location not real? Is the mark not real? is the location it refers to not real? is the phenomenon demonstrated - and the way it is demonstrated - not real? Let's add "real" to the list of words you need to define. — tim wood
No, I'm saying that movement through "space" (see below for definition) is not reality. Real movement, in the real physical world. is always through a medium, air, water, etc.; it is not through "space" unless space is conceived of as a real a medium, like the aether, which it is not in conventional physics. — Metaphysician Undercover
Movement granted, but the space for it not granted? And are you confusing "real" and "true?"Space is a concept which can be applied to help us model movement. — Metaphysician Undercover
We do not. Sunrise is a well-understood phenomenon. And the location of sunrise equally well-understood, and can for given parameters be marked with a stone. Which, come to think of it, has been a world-wide practice since pre-history.The mark on the map is real, as a real mark on the map. What does the mark signify? I said a location, "the place where the sun comes up". You seem to agree with me, that there is no such place, no such real location, independent from the map. Is this correct? Do we have agreement here? — Metaphysician Undercover
There's air and water, possibly jello, all kinds of other media. And in as much as there is no such thing as space, in which these are, they must each itself be uniquely primordial. And how does that work? Whence cometh; where situated? And as to what is in physics, I advert back to the cow in the book, which isn't. — tim wood
And movement isn't necessarily through; but it is "with respect to" or relative to. — tim wood
We do not. Sunrise is a well-understood phenomenon. And the location of sunrise equally well-understood, and can for given parameters be marked with a stone. Which, come to think of it, has been a world-wide practice since pre-history. — tim wood
But maybe relsolve it this way. Let's ask the scientists on TPF. Space, time, real? Existing? Or unreal, not existing? — tim wood
But maybe resolve it this way. Let's ask the scientists on TPF. Space, time, real? Existing? Or unreal, not existing? — tim wood
Oh great idea, go ahead, start a thread, I'll read it. — Metaphysician Undercover
You appear to have forgotten the magic phrase, "I (we) don't know." Without it, you're in trouble. For example, "I cannot (do not know how to) drive that car," and, "That car cannot be driven." Big difference, and I assume you see the potential for trouble. — tim wood
If we agree on that, I would say that any location marked on the map is the very same principle. A "location" marks something on the map which has no real existence independent of the map. So for example, if I put an X, and say that the treasure is buried at the X, on the map "X" means a location, but on the ground "X" means what ever is there, according to interpretation of the map. Whether it is a treasure which is there, or whatever, is to be determined, but whatever is there is not "a location", it is a real physical thing. So whatever it is on the ground, is something other than a "location", and the thing on the map, which is said to be "the location" is completely different from what is on the ground because "location" refers to something conceptual, a set of rules intended for finding something on the ground, or determining a thing's position relative to other things. — Metaphysician Undercover
Could we postulate that as space and time are things we can measure, therefore, they exist? — Richard Townsend
Space is not something which we measure. We measure attributes like size, volume, and various relations (distance for example) between things. And by the conventions of modern physics we do not measure time either. Time is the measurement, and it is a product of the act of relating movements, or actions, one to another. When Newtonian "absolute time" was replaced with Einsteinian "relative time", time was no longer conceptualized as something measured, and then became only the measurement. The duration of time is completely dependent on the frame of reference, which is artificial. — Metaphysician Undercover
If space and time cannot be measured then why do they exist? Or are you saying they don't really exist? — Richard Townsend
An excellent TPF best kind of question! Nothing complicated or difficult. Let's try a short-cut: if in consideration of my actions, you aver that I have knowledge, then I have knowledge, and I know about what I have knowledge of. And of course we may both be wrong. But I invoke knowing in this context to distinguish between them what knows and them that don't. And those who do not know will often argue in an expanded and concealed way that because they don't know, they know. E.g., it isn't X therefore it must be Y. And it can get pretty twisted, as with out interlocutor in this thread, viz.,tim, may I ask you what you mean by 'knowing?' I need some more clarification. — Richard Townsend
He seems to believe he has answered any question about space and time, and to be sure, he has answered some very narrow questions about them - but those not the questions in question. In his quote he refers to "facilitating measurement, and representation of what is measured." (My italics.)Space and time exist as concepts produced for the purpose of facilitating measurement, and representation of what is measured, just like a coordinate system, which I mentioned above. — Metaphysician Undercover
What are considered hidden variables in physics? Would dark matter be considered as a hidden variable?
No, dark matter has nothing to do with it.
Hidden variables arise in the context of quantum physics, in particular the famous Bell’s Theorem according to which quantum physics is nonlocal.
This is best illustrated by an example from Bell’s book, an example involving socks. Suppose you take a trip somewhere. Upon arrival in your hotel room, you notice that you have only half a pair of your favorite gray socks in your suitcase. From this you instantly infer that the other half must be left behind at home in your socks drawer. The variable representing half a pair of your gray socks was there all along, but it was “hidden” from you for whatever reason.
Now take the analogy to the quantum realm. You have a pair of correlated particles isolated from the environment, say, a pair of electrons. You measure the spin of one of the electrons and you immediately infer the outcome of a spin measurement that might be carried out on that other electron. Could it be that the spin value of the electron, just like the information about your socks, was there all along, as a “hidden variable”?
The answer is a no, for reasons that are mildly technical, but I think I can explain the essence. A spin measurement involves orienting the instrument with respect to which the spin is measured. This orientation need not be known in advance. Yet the spins of the two electrons will be correlated nonetheless. There is no classical physics analogue for this phenomenon. The point is, information in the form of “local hidden variables” that the electrons carried with themselves is not sufficient to account for the correlation between the two electrons under arbitrary orientations of the instruments used to measure them. Additional, “non-local” information is required to account for the observed correlation. Quantum physics is thus manifestly non-local, cannot be explained using hidden variables. (What is absolutely fascinating that despite this nonlocality, quantum field theory is demonstrably and strictly causal, i.e., contrary to some fictionalized accounts or even some misguided popular science explanations, quantum entanglement cannot be used to circumvent the relativistic speed limit or create a time machine. It just does not work that way, which, incidentally, is actually a Good Thing, as an acausal universe would be chaotic and unpredictable, quite possibly unstable).
And this same wind blows through his other arguments. There is no space, but there are all sorts of media through which things move. So if there is not space, what is the account for media - I'd say "presence of" but even that can't be, absent space. And so it goes. — tim wood
What is absolutely fascinating that despite this nonlocality, quantum field theory is demonstrably and strictly causal, i.e., contrary to some fictionalized accounts or even some misguided popular science explanations, quantum entanglement cannot be used to circumvent the relativistic speed limit or create a time machine ~ Victor Toth.
how else may entanglement be explained within our current framework of spacetime? It can't, which seems to indicate that spacetime and entanglement are merely human constructs that account for data collection. — Richard Townsend
Q: Treating quantum mechanics as a single-user theory resolves a lot of the paradoxes, like spooky action at a distance.
A: Yes, but in a way that a lot of people find troubling. The usual story of Bell’s theorem is that it tells us the world must be nonlocal. That there really is spooky action at a distance. So they solved one mystery by adding a pretty damn big mystery! What is this non-locality? Give me a full theory of it. My fellow QBists and I instead think that what Bell’s theorem really indicates is that the outcomes of measurements are experiences, not revelations of something that’s already there. Of course others think that we gave up on science as a discipline, because we talk about subjective degrees of belief. But we think it solves all of the foundational conundrums. — Chris Fuchs, Quanta Magazine Interview
Your position is, then, that air, water, jello, whatever, as media, simply exist, but not anywhere because there is not any where for them to be? But you mentioned measurement, as the representation of what was measured. If my desk is four feet from my bookcase, that is four feet of what? Air? And the air being withdrawn, which is possible, or replaced with water, which is possible, does that alter the distance between desk and case?Why do you require "space" to account for the media? — Metaphysician Undercover
Your position is, then, that air, water, jello, whatever, as media, simply exist, but not anywhere because there is not any where for them to be? — tim wood
But you mentioned measurement, as the representation of what was measured. If my desk is four feet from my bookcase, that is four feet of what? Air? And the air being withdrawn, which is possible, or replaced with water, which is possible, does that alter the distance between desk and case? — tim wood
Space and time exist as concepts produced for the purpose of facilitating measurement, and representation of what is measured, just like a coordinate system, which I mentioned above. — Metaphysician Undercover
An excellent TPF best kind of question! Nothing complicated or difficult. Let's try a short-cut: if in consideration of my actions, you aver that I have knowledge, then I have knowledge, and I know about what I have knowledge of. And of course we may both be wrong. But I invoke knowing in this context to distinguish between them what knows and them that don't. And those who do not know will often argue in an expanded and concealed way that because they don't know, they know. E.g., it isn't X therefore it must be Y. And it can get pretty twisted, as with out interlocutor in this thread, viz., — tim wood
I agree with the gist, I think, except for the qualification 'merely' - what's the Feynman quote, 'nothing is "mere"'? But overall I agree that there is an inextricably subjective element in the observations. This conforms with QBism (Quantum Baynsianism) as I understand it. — Wayfarer
Your position is, then, that air, water, jello, whatever, as media, simply exist, but not anywhere because there is not any where for them to be? But you mentioned measurement, as the representation of what was measured. If my desk is four feet from my bookcase, that is four feet of what? Air? And the air being withdrawn, which is possible, or replaced with water, which is possible, does that alter the distance between desk and case? — tim wood
You shall have to decide what your ground is and where it is. For me the ground is what I can work with and within, with consistency. If I'm furnishing rooms, then I work with furniture, and take it as existing. If I'm a termite, maybe that nice wooden chair is no chair to me, being beyond my comprehension, but is instead lunch . Or a scientist of the very small, in which case it's just atoms and smaller things and force fields. No one disqualifying the other, but each its own application, however narrow, and not to be carelessly mixed. I submit, then, that you need good working definitions and understandings of "nothing" and "existence," and any other term that in use itself leads you into aporia. An example here:Without this pre-existing condition, no discussion would be possible. — Richard Townsend
I don't see how replacing four feet of air with four feet of water would alter the distance, — Metaphysician Undercover
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