Now my point, Andrew M. Appeals to identity do not support the real existence of the apple. "Identity" claims, asserts, or presupposes existence, but what we need here is the principles by which such a claim of existence is justified. Then we can apply these principles in an attempt to justify the existence of the particle, as an identified existent. — Metaphysician Undercover
So here's the problem. The logical system at work here is set up with the premise that the existence of the object is justified if, or, "the object exists if", it has contextual relations with other objects (relativity). So any mathematics used will produce conclusions from this premise. If we desire to assume a "Cosmos", "universe", or "world", to objectify such relationships, and validate the existence of any particular object, that very premise, will not allow that the assumed "world" has existence except in relation to other worlds. — Metaphysician Undercover
When one refers to "the apple", that individual is referring to a particular instance of temporal continuity in which the similitude of an apple is of the essence. In order that one can refer to 'the apple", it is necessary that this similitude appears for a duration of time. What constitutes the "existence" of that apple is that this similitude persists through a duration of time. If the similitude seemed to flash upon the scene for a simple yoctosecond of time, then was gone, we could hardly assign "existence" to the apple. "Existence" requires that the described thing has a temporal duration — Metaphysician Undercover
Hang on Woz, I think you've crossed threads. — Wayfarer
You're claiming that the only possible starting point for meaningful discussion, is the premise that things exist in the intuitive, common sense notion of "things exist". And you want to maintain this premise, while introducing the QM premise that things do not "have a precise position and momentum at the same time". Do you not see that this QM premise contradicts the common sense notion of "exists"? When there is contradiction, we have an either-or situation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you AndrewM, recognize that there is a fundamental incompatibility between the premise that there is just one continuity, and the premise that there is multiple continuities? These two premises are incompatible, contradictory. — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course, as you know, Everett's theory doesn't make any of those assumptions let alone declare they are principles of reality. — tom
The whole point your long and detailed answer skips over is the 'm' in mwi. — Wayfarer
The instrinsically grotesque nature of there being 'many worlds' is skipped over by the advocates; like, the strangeness of the idea that we're all part of an infinite 'hall of mirrors' is being skipped over, on account of the fact that it is 'mathematically convenient'. Don't you see how strange that is? — Wayfarer
This has been an instructive debate. — Wayfarer
So, which do you choose? Do you want to discuss MWI, or do you want to adhere to the "existence" which most reasonable people refer to? — Metaphysician Undercover
The EPR paper was one of these 'thought experiments' - it was that paper that led to the Bell's Inequality paper which was published in 1964 (many scientists will say that it is one of the greatest scientific papers in history). And it was that paper that formed the basis of the Alain Aspect experiments which in the early 1980's empirically demonstrated the entanglement of remote paired particles, thereby showing that the EPR paper was wrong. It was the final nail in the coffin of Einstein's realist philosophy, pending something world-shatteing coming along. — Wayfarer
Hence, this whole debate. I wouldn't think you would propose infinite branching universes unless you had a real need to do so. — Wayfarer
That I certainly don't agree with. I agree with the tested/potentially falsified part, but that doesn't mean that theories etc. are not read instrumentally, and I neither agree that (a) something makes it the case that theories etc. are meant to be read as ontological commitments nor that (b) most scientists read theories etc. as ontological commitments rather than instrumentally. — Terrapin Station
But in my post, I questioned the existence of all objects, so referring to molecules doesn't change anything. — Metaphysician Undercover
None of those alternative theories are empirically distinguishable from the rational theory of fossils, yet we manage to reject them. Not so in QM unfortunately. — tom
Not according to Neils Bohr; which is part of what is at issue, isn't it? — Wayfarer
In terms of talking about ontological commitments yes. But you can simply see it as an instrumental way of talking about what's going on, and assume that we don't really understand at all just what photons are like ontologically yet. What's really going on, what photons are really like, might be something that we can't really fathom yet. "Paths" are just a way to relate it to what we can conceive of, what we have experience with, etc. — Terrapin Station
These 'particles' have no definite location until being measured; they're not in one place and don't have an actual trajectory. That is the 'fuzzy' nature of quantum particles. So the interference patterns might really represent the probabilities and nothing more than that; they're not really trails left by a particle, because there really aren't any particles until they're measured. — Wayfarer
You forgot one important option. Is the photon real? — Metaphysician Undercover
That is what the 'realist' approach is wanting to preserve - the fundamental separation of observer and observed. — Wayfarer
But supposing that "there are multiple, branching universes" certainly doesn't strike me as a "natural causal explanation" that's more reasonable than "this stuff has some unusual characteristics that seems to behave like a wave at times and like a particle at times; we don't completely understand why yet, but these equations work for making predictions about it." Instead, it seems like incoherent fantasy.material. — Terrapin Station
I would have thought that the 'many paths' are not phenomena. They're inferences. But one cannot see 'the other paths', by definition - they're what's in the 'other worlds'. We only see one path - so that is the only 'phenomenon' being observed, the rest is inference. — Wayfarer
So, for the umpteenth time, 'many worlds' means 'many worlds'? Yes or no? — Wayfarer
Andrew, 'Worlds' doesn't begin with 'M', does it. The question was, what does "M" stand for? And obviously the answer is 'many' - as in 'many worlds'. That is what it means, it refers to branching or splitting or multiple universes. — Wayfarer
Now, if it doesn't mean that, then there's nothing to debate. If the 'many' in 'many worlds' is simply an hypothetical mathematical construct or device, then it's back to 'shut up and calculate'. But the controversy is about the notion that it really does say there are many or parallel realms. — Wayfarer
only for 'weak' mwi; for the strong version there really are countless separate or parallel universes. And that is metaphysics, — Wayfarer
I think 'we don't know' is the superior answer. Physics is getting hopelessly entangled in pseudo-metaphysics, Everett's being the most egregious example. A dose of humility and a sense of the limitations of science might be preferable. — Wayfarer
Under MW, entanglement is not just a (statistical) correlation. "Correlation" is the wrong word. It is the anti-explanatory word used by anti-realists to avoid any questions about why their algorithm works, particularly as the algorithm does not apply to reality, but rather what can be said about reality.
Rather, under MW, the physical mechanism by which the right branches encounter each other - in order to preserve conservation laws etc - is termed "information flow" or something similar. The process was fully worked out here: http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/quant-ph/9906007 — tom
Thanks - that's pretty close to what I thought, but I don't understand your first point, 'an observation entangles the observer with objects on a particular world branch'. I had thought 'entanglement' was what Einstein meant when he spoke of 'spooky action at a distance'. What does 'entangling an observer with objects' mean? How does that manifest? — Wayfarer
You say that MWI is 'highly explanatory' - it may be, but at the cost of assuming an infinite number of parallel universes. — Wayfarer
All quantum interference experiments are evidence of Many Worlds. — Tom
@Tom - could I put the question to you: what problem is the 'many worlds' interpretation a solution for? Why is it necessary to invoke 'many worlds'? — Wayfarer
Quite a few philosophically minded folk would love to do away with the subjective/objective distinction. — Marchesk
If the territory is utterly a-conceptual then how could our conceptual judgements bear any relation to it whatsoever? — John
It was Wittgenstein who said "the world is the totality of facts, not of things". I take that to mean the world is the totality of states of affairs, not the totality of epistemic facts. The totality of states of affairs constitutes the total nexus of relations between things, and things themselves are also, unless they be some kind of posited, but really incomprehensible, atomic simple, further complexes of relations. Relations are not physical, but rather conceptual, which leads to the conclusion that the world must be, at bottom, not merely brute non-conceptual entities, if the idea of such entities even makes any actual sense, but also the conceptual relations between them. — John
So, what was the fact prior to its discovery? — John
I hope I can butt in to ask, one puzzle for me in this area is why some terms are deemed 'mental' and some 'physical' and where the border falls. For instance, a description of a chemical compound, while arguably an abstraction over more primitive physical terms, is deemed physical, but words like 'thought' are deemed mental. I presume the one is vertically constitutive of and the other is just supervenient on the physical, but I'm not clear. To describe someone's character I might call them 'hot-blooded' or 'cold-hearted' but these are understood to be mental descriptions. — mcdoodle
I'm interested for instance in the practising medical scientist's use of terms. In dealing with pain in a phantom limb, for instance, the patient's belief seems central, and we have no idea what the physical equivalent of their belief in their limb is. So the working scientist has to engage in methodological dualism. And yet a different, theoretical scientist argues that this 'belief' is non-primary, even though they can offer no empirical model of explanation. — mcdoodle
Anyway, my working definition of mind is 'that which cognises differences'. — Wayfarer
So, for you there are no unknown facts about the universe that are yet to be discovered? Such as for example, whether some particular distant galaxy has a black hole at its center or is some very precise number of light-years across, or contains exactly so many stars? — John