You see little bits of 'quantum weirdness' like entanglement and vague references to FTL signalling, wave/particle duality, the probabilistic nature of the computations, and Schrödinger's cat suggesting that quantum weirdness occurs on all length scales. — fdrake
t doesn't take quantum mechanics to kill materialism and determinism. Both are metaphysics, not statements about how the world is, whether or not that is understood by those who accept or reject them.. — T Clark
In the Jinan network, some 200 users from China's military, government, finance and electricity sectors will be able to send messages safe in the knowledge that only they are reading them. It will be the world's longest land-based quantum communications network, stretching over 2 000 km. — The First Article You Sent
Given that a practical application of entanglement to macroscopic particles is to enhance quantum electronic devices in real world situations and at ambient temperatures, the researchers sought a different approach to this problem. Using an infrared laser, they coaxed into order (known in scientific circles as "preferentially aligned") the magnetic states of many thousands of electrons and nuclei and then proceeded to entangle them by bombarding them with short electromagnetic pulses, just like those used in standard magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). As a result, many entangled pairs of electrons and nuclei were created in an area equal to the size and volume of a red blood cell on a Silicon Carbide (SiC) semiconductor. — The Second Article You Sent
t seems to have become fashionable to hijack quantum mechanics for Jesus, idealism and whatnot. — jorndoe
The physical sciences are materialistic. They describe phenomenon in terms of material interactions. — Marchesk
That said, I am continually nonplussed by the general hostility toward idealism displayed by the philosophical and scientific communities. The only explanation for it that I can see is that most philosophers and scientists are positivists who lump idealism in with what they would regard as "magical thinking" or what have you. — Thorongil
consciousness causes wave-function collapse' — Wayfarer
Arguing for idealism from scientific theories that are poorly understood and subject to change, such as quantum mechanics, is to build one's idealism on sand. The arguments of Plato, Augustine, Berkeley, Kant, Schopenhauer, etc are a much firmer base on which to rest one's idealism, since they don't depend on scientific theories and aren't made falsifiable by them. — Thorongil
They are simply potentialities which are only 'actualised' by the act of observation. So it's not as if, prior to being observed, the particle exists in some unknown place - prior to being observed, all that exists is a literal wave of probabilities. There is no actual 'electron' in that wave, and isn't, until it is observed. So this undermines the idea of mind-independence, a world that 'exists anyway', whether it is being observed or not. Sure there are people exploiting the gullible, but the facts remain. — Wayfarer
'Anyone who is not shocked by quantum theory has not understood it.' ~ Neils Bohr — Wayfarer
quantum mechanics carries a metaphysical implication. If it were just physics, there'd be nothing to discuss. — Wayfarer
quantum mechanics carries a metaphysical implication. If it were just physics, there'd be nothing to discuss. — Wayfarer
'Anyone who is not shocked by quantum theory has not understood it. — Wayfarer
What, the metaphysical implications from the 17th century Enlightenment philosophers? There is a physical reality underlying observations too, buddy, and the reason for the mess is because that reality is not yet explained. Funny you should quote Bohr and commit the very error. — TimeLine
What's to be shocked about? If it's only that the world at atomic scale operates differently than how we are used to seeing it at human scale, I don't see that as shocking at all. — T Clark
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