to which the answer is, it is kind of real, up until the time it is registered on plate. at which point it becomes definite. — Wayfarer
I don't see why you would say this is unanswerable. If there is real possibilities then many do not ever become actual, otherwise they would not be real possibilities. Possibility means that actualization is not necessary. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, simply because there is no material ultimate, materialism is like a kind of popular myth. — Wayfarer
There must be a good reason why there is no consensus among those who might actually know what they are talking about when it comes to the question about ontological status of the collapse of the wave function. — Janus
The discomfort that I feel is associated with the fact that the observed perfect quantum correlations seem to demand something like the "genetic" hypothesis. For me, it is so reasonable to assume that the photons in those experiments carry with them programs, which have been correlated in advance, telling them how to behave. This is so rational that I think that when Einstein saw that, and the others refused to see it, he was the rational man. The other people, although history has justified them, were burying their heads in the sand. I feel that Einstein's intellectual superiority over Bohr, in this instance, was enormous; a vast gulf between the man who saw clearly what was needed, and the obscurantist. So for me, it is a pity that Einstein's idea doesn't work. The reasonable thing just doesn't work. — John Stewart Bell (1928-1990), author of 'Bell's Theorem' (or 'Bell's Inequality'), quoted in Quantum Profiles, by Jeremy Bernstein 1991, p. 84
We don't know whether there are "material ultimates" or not. — Janus
Put predictions aside for a moment. How would you deal with possibilities in the sense of "it is possible for me to do X, and possible for me to do Y", when X and Y are mutually exclusive? If I act for Y, then X is made to be impossible, and if I act for X, then Y is made to be impossible. However, at the time when I am deciding, both are possible.
How can we model this type of future in relation to this type of past, when both X and Y change from being equally possible in the future, to being one necessary, and one impossible in the past? What happens at "the present" to change the ontological status of these events? — Metaphysician Undercover
It doesn’t seem an apt analogy to me. At issue is the nature of the object in question and what it is that transforms it from a possibility to an actuality. — Wayfarer
From an instrumentalist perspective, scientific theories are conditional propositions that do not say how things are in themselves, but rather predict or describe the empirical consequences of performing a particular action or observation in a particular context. So according to this perspective, possibilities are what is directly expressed by scientific theories, but not what is represented or referred to by such theories. — sime
I don't see how it follows that there must be real possibilities which do not become actualized. If nature is fundamentally random there would be, but if it is fundamentally deterministic there would not be, and we have no way of telling whether nature is fundamentally random or deterministic. — Janus
If I speculate that the past might change, then aren't I contradicting the very definition of what i mean by "the past"?
And If i speculate that the future is already decided, then aren't I contradicting the very definition of what i mean by "the future"? — sime
I don't conceive of a clear distinction between the tenses and the modalities. I interpret both empirically within the context of the present, even I don't consider their meanings to be empirically exhausted by present observations, memories, intentions, actions and so on. — sime
Notice all of them are about the 'debate over the nature of reality' and 'struggles for the soul of science'. It suggests that there's something important and real at stake. — Wayfarer
If a material ultimate can be conceived of in the classical sense of an atom, an indivisible point-particle, I think it's pretty definitively disproved. It is now said that sub-atomic particles are 'excitations in fields' - but what 'fields' are is an open question, as is whether there may be fields other than electromagnetic (which you would never detect with electromagnetic instruments, for example morphic fields.) — Wayfarer
So I really cannot understand your way of thinking here. The assumption of "real possibilities" as a primary premise, denies the possibility of determinism, leaving the proposition "nature is fundamentally deterministic" as necessarily false, therefore not relevant in this context. — Metaphysician Undercover
I can't see any reason to think the answer is not undecidable. — Janus
quantum mechanics has been around since the 1920’s at least, in a fairly settled form. John von Neumann laid out the mathematical structure in 1932. Subsequently, quantum mechanics has become the most important and best-tested part of modern physics. Without it, nothing makes sense. Every student who gets a degree in physics is supposed to learn QM above all else. There are a variety of experimental probes, all of which confirm the theory to spectacular precision.
And yet — we don’t understand it. — Sean Carroll
Remember the basic idea behind the concepts of materiality and physicality is that they denote that which exists in and of itself independently of human perception and understanding — Janus
You are ignoring that fact that all possibilities remain such for us (since we cannot know the future). So even if what we think of as real (i.e. physically law-abiding as opposed to merely logical) possibilities are actually necessities (if determinism is true) they still remain just possibilities, epistemologically speaking. — Janus
Too many double negatives in that to make sense of. — Wayfarer
And yet — we don’t understand it.
— Sean Carroll
Makes me wonder if it is a form of sorcery :yikes: — Wayfarer
Sorry Janus, I just cannot follow you. — Metaphysician Undercover
Not an auspicious omen for a fruitful conversation. — Janus
If we don't undertsnd it, how can we draw any conclusions about it? Sounds like the very defintion of "undecidable' to me. — Janus
I really don't understand what you are saying here. You appear to be saying that you see no clear distinction between past and future, because you interpret everything "within the context of the present". — Metaphysician Undercover
But isn't it the case that your reference to "the present" already implies a clear distinction between past and future? What could you possible mean by "the present", other than an assumed separation between memories of past, and anticipations of the future? Therefore your reference to "the present" seems to already imply a clear distinction between past and future. — Metaphysician Undercover
Furthermore, you refer to "present observations", but this concept is logically flawed. There can be no such thing as present observations because "to observe" is to take note of what happens, and this implies that an observation, being what has been noticed is necessarily in the past. It is this idea, of "present observations" which is actually self-contradicting. — Metaphysician Undercover
What I explained to you is that I could not make sense of your description of real possibilities as "physically law-abiding". — Metaphysician Undercover
I can assure you that people draw a lot of conclusions about things which they do not understand. — Metaphysician Undercover
I understand the tenses to be closely related to modal distinctions made in relation to the present, but I don't deny the modal distinctions, nor the practical psychological distinction between past and future, or what McTaggart crudely referred to as the A series (is psychological time really a series?). But like McTaggart, I don't think the information content of the "A series" has any obvious relationship to the B series which is all that the public theory of physics refers to, or to the broader physical conception of time that Wittgenstein occasionally referred to as "information time" which i think of as a "use-meaning" generalisation of McTaggarts B series that also includes the practice of time keeping ( see Hintikka for more discussion on Wittgenstein's evolving views on the subject). — sime
The word "present" is only used to stress the distinction between the A and B series and the fact that observations are always in the present tense, even when they are used to evaluate past-contigent propositions (which are understood to be past-contigent in the sense of the B series, but not necessarily in the sense of the A series)
So yes, observations are not of the present but they are always in relation to the present tense. Furthermore, if the B series isn't reducible to facts that are obtainable in the present-tense then the existence and usefulness of the B series can be doubted or denied, and at the very least cannot be reconciled with the the present-tensed practice of physics. — sime
A logical possibility is anything which is not self-contradictory, while a real possibility is something that could actually come to be. For example, it may or may not be a real possibility (epistemically speaking of course) that there are unicorns on some distant planet, whereas as there is no possibility that there may be perfectly round perfectly square rocks on some planet somewhere. — Janus
"not self-contradictory", and "could actually come to be", are just different descriptions of the same type of possibilities. — Metaphysician Undercover
You're not getting the distinction between what is logically impossible and what may be, due to the nature of things, physically impossible, even though not logically self-contradictory. — Janus
What you wrote there reads to me like nonsensical philosobabble. — Janus
why you would presume that it is physically impossible for anything to be physically impossible, so to use your word, it's all just "philosobabble" anyway. — Metaphysician Undercover
which was very badly expressed. I didn't mean to claim that it was physically impossible that anything should be physically impossible which would be a contradiction, The redundancy of expression there was just for emphasis; what I meant was that presumably some things are physically impossible.Presumably what is physically impossible is physically impossible — Janus
That is to say that "physically impossible" is just a possibility, and therefore not really impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
what I meant was that presumably some things are physically impossible. — Janus
Physical impossibility is admittedly just a possibility for us — Janus
Physical impossibility is admittedly just a possibility for us; we are epistemologically limited, so we don't know with certainty whether anything is physically impossible or not — Janus
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