There seems to be information missing from this reality... where is this information hiding? Some sort of non-material substrate maybe? — Devans99
It would explain the following:
1. Waveform collapse. Hidden variables describing the particles position etc… are hidden in the non-material substrate. De Broglie–Bohm pilot wave theory for example. — Devans99
2. Dark matter/energy. Astronomers can’t find them but insist they are there. Maybe dark matter/energy exists in the non-material substrate but its mass effects things in the real world — Devans99
3. Radioactive decay (and other ‘stochastic’ mechanisms). Hidden variables in the non-material substrate determine when atoms decay. — Devans99
4. Quantum entanglement. Einstein’s spooky action at a distant could be explained if FTL travel is possible in the non-material substrate or if it is organised differently to the material world (maybe locality is persevered) — Devans99
In De Broglie-Bohm, the hidden variables are the particles. Can never figure out if the wavefunction is a real thing in that theory. Probably best avoid it since it has been refuted so many times — Inis
These Dark theories are really just catchy names for particular problems. Not sure how suggesting the observed anomalous effects are caused by something immaterial. Seems to only make matters worse. — Inis
How would hidden variable in a non-material substance do that? How can non-material substances affect material substances, and how do they store variables? — Inis
Any explanation that appeals to spooks or the mysterious, or the non-physical, or the superluminal, really doesn't explain anything, and you may therefore reject it. Especially when explanations exist that don't invoke those things. — Inis
I don't believe the wave function collapse is random, so there must be hidden variables in the non-material substrate. Everything is cause and effect IMO. There is no other way for the universe to get things done; it must apply at some level. — Devans99
We are missing matter and energy; galaxies are not rotating correctly for the amount of observed mass. That mass has to hidden be somewhere. If a non-material substrate could have the property of mass then it would be a possible answer. — Devans99
How else do you explain spooky action at a distance without something a bit spooky? You are not going to find a local explanation for non-local behaviour so it will always be spooky. — Devans99
Bohmian mechanics has been refuted so many times, it is getting boring. Physicists don't even mention wavefunction collapse anymore anyway. For the Copenhagenists, it purely imaginary event, for Everettians, it doesn't happen, and the view of the Quantum Bayesians seems to be the same as the Copenhagenists. The wavefunction is just a tool, it's not a thing. — Inis
De Broglie-Bohm is refuted and doesn't work. — Inis
If there is a non-material reality it should in some way interact with this world effecting its phenomena. If you can give an example of this interaction, and make that example a demonstration/experimentation than you will have proof of a spirit realm. — Josh Alfred
I just cannot countenance a non-deterministic interpretation and then many worlds Interpretation is IMO crazy so I'm staying with non-local hidden variables. — Devans99
Despite it being refuted, and impossible to relativise.
Your attitude is isomorphic to those who adhere to geocentricism and the flat Earth. — Inis
I don't think a materialistic explanation for entanglement is possible.
If you reject a non-material substrate, how would you explain quantum entanglement? — Devans99
How in the world would a nonmaterial substrate explain it? — Terrapin Station
The non-material substrate could be arranged differently so the entangled particles remain co-located in the substrate. Or FTL communication is possible in the substrate. — Devans99
But you could just make the same moves re the material world without having to posit something incoherent. — Terrapin Station
First, you're ignoring that the idea of a nonmaterial anything doesn't even make any sense. — Terrapin Station
Secondly, you're doing what I talked about earlier re assuming that our theories are correct. — Terrapin Station
Third, you're comfortable jumping to "well FTL communication is impossible in the material world, but it would be possible in the nonmaterial world" (even though the idea of a nonmaterial world doesn't even make any sense and we haven't the faintest idea whatsoever how FTL communication would be possible in a nonmaterial world . . . we haven't the faintest idea whatsoever how anything would work in a nonmaterial world, or what any properties of it would be).
You might as well just "explain" every mystery with, "It must be magic." — Terrapin Station
The fact that there is one sort of reality we know about (the material world) does not exclude the possibility of alternative forms of reality. We are missing information in the real world and it must be somewhere. If we can't find it in the real world, it must be elsewhere. So a non-material world makes sense. — Devans99
There is masses of experimental evidence for the speed of light and for quantum entanglement; — Devans99
FTL travel is not possible because of spacetime — Devans99
Quantum entanglement as I understand it has been experimentally proven — Rank Amateur
The philosophic implication of such a world is all problems then become metaphysical - since all physical constants are only valid in the space time plane we are aware of. — Rank Amateur
You also don't seem to be using the term "metaphysical" in the standard (at least modern) philosophical sense there — Terrapin Station
If it's a substance, won't it just be subsumed into physics, and become part of material reality? — Inis
A pet peeve of mine is theory worship, and this sort of thing smells of theory worship--proceeding as if the theory can't be wrong, so there must be something like a "non-material substrate." — Terrapin Station
The whole matter of this thread is a wishful God-in-the-gaps proposal. Empty, useless. — tim wood
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