Open the box. What is the status of the 2 hundred dollar bills? — hypericin
Right now I'm thinking of a 10 digit number. I'm not repeating it, and there's no way I will remember it in 5 minutes. Could a sufficiently clever alien, arriving on a venus like earth 10 million years from now, retrieve it? — hypericin
At some point, it becomes absolutely undecidable which is real, and which is the counterfeit. That knowledge is lost to the universe. — hypericin
Suppose you have a $100 bill, and a molecule-for-molecule counterfeit of one. — hypericin
Suppose you have a $100 bill, and a molecule-for-molecule counterfeit of one — hypericin
I'm having a hard time wrapping my head around the no hiding theorem. Right now I'm thinking of a 10 digit number. I'm not repeating it, and there's no way I will remember it in 5 minutes. Could a sufficiently clever alien, arriving on a venus like earth 10 million years from now, retrieve it? — hypericin
Would you answer the same way if the no hiding theorem turned out to be false? Or true, but information can still be irretrievably, in principle as well as practice, lost and inaccessible? — hypericin
I'm having a hard time wrapping my head around the no hiding theorem. — hypericin
It doesn't matter if they are indistinguishable, so long as they can be individiually tracked. — hypericin
All I have to do to tell them apart is to put the real one in my left pocket, and the counterfeit, fresh from the counterfeit machine, in my right — hypericin
I would answer the same way if the information were merely irretrievable, since the information does still exist.
— Andrew M
But if it were irretrievable, from our perspective the situation is identical with that where it doesn't exist. — hypericin
Do we know, of this "quantum information," if a) it can ever be what we call knowledge, i.e., known, and, b) can it always be known, in the sense of retrieved? Or not retrieved? Or not retrievable? — tim wood
I imagine throwing a stone into the ocean thereby disturbing the water. And maybe that determines uniquely the future of the ocean. The ocean, then, stores a record of that disturbance. But how is that to be recognized as such, and how retrieved as to the particulars that make that what it is? — tim wood
Might it be the case that the no-hide theorem merely means that change is in some sense permanent? Anyone? — tim wood
In order to make the first qubit “lose” its information, the scientists had to make the system undergo a bleaching process. In their experiment, they bleached the system through quantum state randomization, in which the qubit transforms from a pure state to a mixed state. Although the randomization operation causes the qubit to appear to lose the information contained in the pure state, the scientists showed that the information could be found in one of the two ancilla qubits. They also demonstrated how to use the ancilla qubits to reconstruct the original state, showing that no information was hiding in the correlations between the original qubit and the ancilla qubits, which is the essence of the no-hiding theorem. — Quantum no-hiding theorem experimentally confirmed for first time
And again, whatever QI is, to be information in any sense must (yes?) mean that it "contains" something that it itself is not, that can be extracted from it, apparently non-destructively, which implies repeatedly. And that something in every case is part of a recoverable path to the unbounded future and the unbounded past, somehow, someway. — tim wood
Proper laws of physics are reversible and therefore preserve the distinctions between states - i.e. information. In this sense, the conservation of information is more fundamental than other physical quantities such as temperature or energy. — Statistical Mechanics - Entropy and conservation of information - Susskind
Liouville's theorem can be thought of as information conservation. The laws of mechanics are equivalent to the rules governing state transition. — Classical Mechanics - Liouville’s theorem - Susskind
And it seems quickly clear that this kind of language and thinking is not adequate for this task. If the theorem is true - one supposes it is - then the language has to be very tightly defined and constrained. I suspect past the breaking point. Information must finally reduce to mere being, and being as information leads to some ferocious paradoxes. — tim wood
Would you agree, on reflection, that in this context (hereinafter to be understood if not stated), that either this is exactly wrong, or needs qualification to be right? If information corresponds to state, then information just is itself and cannot be other than itself - without being other. If information is descriptive of any PS, then it is not that PS, but its own distinct PS, and if that PS is the idea of the thing, then that itself becomes difficult.Information (or state) is an abstraction of physical systems (PS). — Andrew M
But we needn't be and I hope are not on opposite sides, but rather put such understandings that we generate and evolve through "to the question" as simply a part of a shared goal of getting a handle on an idea that at first look seems to me fatally problematic. — tim wood
Information (or state) is an abstraction of physical systems (PS).
— Andrew M
Would you agree, on reflection, that in this context (hereinafter to be understood if not stated), that either this is exactly wrong, or needs qualification to be right? If information corresponds to state, then information just is itself and cannot be other than itself - without being other. If information is descriptive of any PS, then it is not that PS, but its own distinct PS, and if that PS is the idea of the thing, then that itself becomes difficult. — tim wood
Or another, that from the metamorphic rock from under an ancient and long gone streambed it is possible to recover what stone what sauron kicked into it on a day 100,000,000 years ago, and the configuration of the splash. Of course some of that evidence went up as water vapor, so part of the recovery must involve the entire atmosphere of the earth - or not? Is the information complete in parts or does it require the whole? — tim wood
I mean in these to evoke a sense of the aporia I think intrinsic to the problem. If information is just state, then it is at the moment and not otherwise. If information is knowable, then the state-as-information must also create some kind of meta-information/state (or something without yet a name) that travels through time, or endures through time, that preserves the original state, somehow. And that asks as to the question of meta-meta-...-meta information/states.
For the theorem to be meaningful it must cut through all of this, yes? — tim wood
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