What I was told on Physics Forum, is whether the particles are fired one at at time, or whether they are fired altogether, the end result is the same. So I am saying, it can't really be a result of 'interference', can it? — Wayfarer
The pattern is dictated by the wave function. That will be so regardless of which apparatus or set-up you're using. The equation which describes the distribution is not dependent on the apparatus, although I imagine that the particulars of each set-up might produce variations because of the distances involved etc. — Wayfarer
But the underlying determinative cause is the wave equation itself - however the wave equation is not a material cause, as it is not something which exists, it's simply a pattern of probabilities, as the name says. — Wayfarer
So I think the real sticking point is, how can a probability be causally efficacious. Isn't that what the whole argument is about? That's what Einstein kept saying to Bohr - 'God doesn't play dice'. He made a slogan out of it. — Wayfarer
The reason why the rate-independence is significant, is that the behaviour of individual 'particles' (not that they're actually particles) is described by the wave-function, whether they're together or separate. In other words, whatever is causing that, is independent of space/time, or, that duration and the proximity of 'particles' are not factors in determining the result. Or so it seems to me. — Wayfarer
That's not confusing super-position and entanglement, although what I'm starting to think is that the 'rate-independence' of the pattern, and the so-called 'entangled states', are actually two aspects of the same underlying cause. — Wayfarer
So if the pattern is not rate-dependent, then by implication the cause of the pattern is not a function of time. — Wayfarer
The question seems to be: how can a particle 'interfere with itself'? — Wayfarer
It seems as if the probability distribution is itself like the so-called 'pilot wave' - in other words, it determines all the possibilities, but only in the sense of constraining the possible paths that any particle takes, whether individually or as part of beam. — Wayfarer
In other words, whether the protons are fired singly or as a beam, makes no difference to the interference pattern. — Wayfarer
Well, glad we got to the bottom of that, although it directly contradicts and answer you gave just above it. — Wayfarer
My apologies, I misread where Wayfarer's quote came from. It came from an article that Orzel did NOT like apparently. — tom
Everett (actually bare quantum formalism) claims that any environment that interacts with the cat in superposition will itself enter a superposed state, — tom
Nope, nowhere in MW is the claim made that measuring the spin of an electron means "you have to build an entire parallel universe around that one electron, identical in all respects except where the electron went". — tom
Orzel is also wrong. by the way. — tom
But insofar as physics is purported to be about what is real, then dorm-room bull is inevitable, as far as I am concerned. — Wayfarer
Orzel's understanding of Many Worlds has improved over the years: — tom
How do you measure an interference effect? Well, you look for some oscillation in the probability distribution. But that’s not a task you can accomplish with a single measurement of a single system– you can only measure probability from repeated measurements of identically prepared systems.
If you’re talking about a simple system, like a single electron or a single photon in a carefully controlled apparatus, this is easy. Everything will behave the same way from one experiment to the next, and with a bit of care, you can pick out the interference pattern. As your system gets bigger, though, “repeated measurements of identically prepared systems” become much harder to achieve. If you’re talking about a big molecule, there are lots more states it could start in, and lots more ways for it to interact with the rest of the universe. And those extra states and interactions mess up the interference effects you need to see to detect the presence of a superposition state. At some point, you can no longer confidently say that the particle of interest is in both states at once; instead, it looks like it was in a single state the whole time.
And that’s it. You appear to have picked out a single possibility at the point where your system becomes too big for you to reliably detect the fact that it’s really in a superposition.
http://scienceblogs.com/principles/2015/02/20/the-philosophical-incoherence-of-too-many-worlds/
(Finally, the above probably sounds more strongly in favor of Many-Worlds than my actual position, which shades toward agnosticism. But nothing makes me incline more toward believing in Many-Worlds than the gibberish that people write when they try to oppose it.)
Now, I've realised what I think is wrong about this view. This is that science views reality through theories and hypotheses. And what I think Einstein is forgetting (and, hey, he's Einstein, so I know I'm saying a lot!) is that the kinds of purported facts that he is arguing about are only disclosed by a rational intelligence who is capable of interpreting the facts. So 'the facts' - and by extension, even the moon - don't exist irrespective of whether one is looking or not. 'Looking' is inextricably intertwined with what is being observed. That has always been the case, but it took 'the observer problem' for it to more or less come up and punch us in the nose! — Wayfarer
We went along with collapse was real, and it was the "observation" which made it real. — Moliere
Heisenberg: ....we have to remember that what we observe is not nature in itself but nature exposed to our method of questioning. Our scientific work in physics consists in asking questions about nature in the language that we possess and trying to get an answer from experiment by the means that are at our disposal.
We always differentiated between instrumental interp from CI, though. — Moliere
What bugged Einstein is his native faith that reality was 'there anyway', whereas the Copenhagen advocates all said that in this matter, the line between observer and observed was no longer clear-cut. And I'm with them on that, as far as I can understand it. — Wayfarer
That's close to my own thinking, but was obviously written before the discovery that the second law of thermodynamics is violated more frequently the smaller anything becomes and completely ignores the Quantum Zeno Effect. — wuliheron
The simplest explanation is that time can flow both forwards and backwards because a context without significant content and any content without a greater context is a demonstrable contradiction. — wuliheron
. Its enough to make Zeno's head spin, but its a more Asian metaphoric take on the issue. — wuliheron
The branching is an artifact of quantum mechanics still being formulated using classical mathematics when all the evidence, including macroscopic evidence, indicates nature is fundamentally analog and what is required, at the very least, is some sort of fuzzy logic variation on the excluded middle. That includes modern quantum mechanics which are formulated as wave mechanics according to the Schrodinger Equation. — wuliheron
What you get depends on exactly what went on when you sent a particular photon in. A little gust of wind might result in a slightly higher air density, leading to a bigger phase shift. Another gust might lower the density, leading to a smaller phase shift. Every time you run the experiment, the shift will be slightly different.
Why do we talk about decoherence as if it produced “separate universes?” It’s really a matter of mathematical convenience. If you really wanted to be perverse, and keep track of absolutely everything, the proper description is a really huge wavefunction including that includes pieces for both photon paths, and also pieces for all of the possible outcomes of all of the possible interactions for each piece of the photon wavefunction as it travels along the path. You’d run out of ink and paper pretty quickly if you tried to write all of that down.
Since the end result is indistinguishable from a situation in which you have particles that took one of two definite paths, it’s much easier to think of it that way. And since those two paths no longer seem to exert any influence on one another– the probability is 50% for each detector, no matter what you do to the relative lengths– it’s as if those two possibilities exist in “separate universes,” with no communication between them.
In reality, though, there are no separate universes. There’s a single wavefunction, in a superposition of many states, with the number of states involved increasing exponentially all the time. The sheer complexity of it prevents us from seeing the clean and obvious interference effects that are the signature of quantum behavior, but that’s really only a practical limitation.
Questions of the form “At what point does such-and-so situation cause the creation of a new universe?” are thus really asking “At what point does such-and-so situation stop leading to detectable interference between branches of the wavefunction?” The answer is, pretty much, “Whenever the random phase shifts between those branches build up to the point where they’re large enough to obscure the interference.” Which is both kind of circular and highly dependent on the specifics of the situation in question, but it’s the best I can do.
I think it can be seen as triadic but it need not be seen so. The belief in a world beyond your experiences can be seen as ultimately the same belief as the belief that there is a self. Each (the world beyond your experience and the self “inside” your experience) is merely a different version of the Noumenon. The belief in a world beyond your experience is simultaneously the belief that your experience has the character of “I-ness” about it — Dominic Osborn
The belief in a self beyond your experience (or, as I suppose we all imagine it: the belief in a self inside experience or on this side of experience) is simultaneously the belief that your experience has the character of “world-ness” about it. (Apologies for these awkward expressions.) There are two versions of duality here, not three things. — Dominic Osborn
What I think I am saying is that Reality is Indeterminacy, Vagueness. Or, what I am saying, to put it another way, is: you can’t say anything about Reality. I then go on to say that all you can say is what Reality is not. So I then say, Reality is not many things, Reality is not one thing; Reality is not the Physical World; Reality is not the Mind; Reality is not this, Reality is not that, etc.. — Dominic Osborn
I think being “lost in the flow of events or actions in unselfconscious fashion” is knowledge (of those events or actions). I don’t consider Knowledge and Being to be separate. I think your definition of Knowledge mirrors your (dualistic) conception of existence: an existence essentially consisting of a knower and a known, a self and its experience (with the possibility of a third thing too, the Noumenon). I think Knowledge is non-dual and Being is non-dual. — Dominic Osborn
I think you, and Kant, and Peirce have swallowed an absurdity, an absurdity however that is so widely and deeply felt and held that it almost passed into the realm of fact. — Dominic Osborn
The positing of a Noumenon is an absurdity: something that exists but is not felt. If whether something is perceived or not has no bearing on whether or not it exists, why are there not not spooks and pixies dancing on my desk here? The positing of the Noumenon is the conceiving of Ignorance. But the conceiving of two realms, the Known and the Unknown simply proposes Duality again. Why do you accept the notion of "Ignorance" uncritically? — Dominic Osborn
The conceiving of the Definite and the Possible simply proposes Duality again. Why do you accept the notion of "Possibility" uncritically? — Dominic Osborn
It can’t be the case that there are two different things, an existence in which the world is real and an existence in which the world is idealistic illusion, but each looks the same to me. — Dominic Osborn
Either the two parts (Phenomenon and Noumenon) are in some way joined, in which case they are not really two after all, or they are not joined, in which case there must be a thing, nothingness, between them, which is at once an existing thing, and must be, in order to hold the two things apart, and also a non-existing thing because, were it to exist, it would join the two things up. But there cannot be a thing that both exists and does not exist. — Dominic Osborn
Matter to what?
And to what degree have you enquired?
Are you sure you can see through the mist? — Punshhh
Yes I see that but, we are blind to what we are in some sense. — Punshhh
I am concerned with other or unconventional ways of knowing and other means of seeing and witnessing and the development of wisdom — Punshhh
How is the actual experience experienced by the experiencer "framed"? — schopenhauer1
What this boils down to is we don't know if we are actually doing metaphysics, or just playing at it. — Punshhh
I think this notion that if there are no counterfactuals, it has no value or useful understanding is skipping over a large amount of phenomena. — schopenhauer1
Like Von Neumann's measuring tools, the model is both map and territory. But it's kind of this unstable thing, right? like it's both - but it can't be both at the same time. — csalisbury
that recursive explosion - where one would need a new tool, M', to measure M+S, and so forth - requires an indefinite expanse which would allow one to keep 'zooming-out'. — csalisbury
well, yes, that which constrains has to be atemporal, but it's a weird kind of atemporality isn't it? It's out of time, yet of time - precipitated from temporal dynamic material processes (tho always implicit within them), yet able to turn around, as it were, and regulate them. — csalisbury
But a model qua TOE isn't merely constraining and controlling a local set of dynamic processes - it envelops everything - both the dynamic processes and the atemporal. It is somehow outside of the dialectic, touching the absolute**, and invites the very idea of the transcendent mind you rightfully decry. It's a fixed thing - a holy trinity of sorts - which explains the fixity/nonfixity/relation-between-the-two which characterizes everything. — csalisbury
Has the symmetry always existed? — darthbarracuda
Is it a brute fact that the third category of vagueness is the land of no brute fact? — darthbarracuda
In actual fact, speculation about a purported first cause is still alive and well in the form of arguments about the fine-tuned universe.h — Wayfarer
↪apokrisis But surely if something must be stopped, it must have begun before. Unless it is just a brute fact that something is the case, which sounds suspiciously like a — darthbarracuda
