What I am wondering about is what is energy exactly. I am sure that there is the formula, as expressed in physics. — Jack Cummins
A naive person looking at a forest sees something very different to an ecologist. As we look at something, we do so through a paradigm, based on our knowledge, and all that gets mixed into the vision, If that helps. — Pop
Well, it has philosophical significance. — Wayfarer
:100: :up:If you believe in both the ontic wavefunction and collapse, you still can't escape the question of when collapse occurred. Was it the measuring apparatus, or the computer? Was it my lab assistant or me? Positing the human observer as the actual collapse mechanism seemed to me to betray the sort of anthro[po]centrism that has marred human enquiry forever. — Kenosha Kid
The subsequent confirmation of 'Bell's inequalities' by the Alain Aspect experiments is generally regarded as decisive in favour of Bohr's interpretation over Einstein's.
— Wayfarer
Care to unpack what you mean by this in a few sentences or paragraphs? — 180 Proof
Positing the human observer as the actual collapse mechanism seemed to me to betray the sort of anthrocentrism that has marred human enquiry forever. — Kenosha Kid
Positing the human observer as the actual collapse mechanism seemed to me to betray the sort of anthrocentrism that has marred human enquiry forever. — Kenosha Kid
What is 'marred forever' is the prospect of literal omniscience on the part of science. And that doesn't bother me in the least. — Wayfarer
When Gallileo rolls a ball down an inclined plane, he expects to be able to describe what happened from setup to measurement. — Kenosha Kid
↪Pop Not at all. — Wayfarer
It has been argued that there are never exact particles or waves, but only some compromise or intermediate between them. For this reason, in 1928 Arthur Eddington coined the name "wavicle" to describe the objects although it is not regularly used today.
Galileo’s method leaves something out. It’s not that significant when it comes to calculating trajectories, but it becomes very important when science aspires to becoming truly universal. — Wayfarer
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