There's a good book called Quantum: Einstein, Bohr, and the Great Debate about the Nature of Reality, Manjit Kumar,, which goes into that in depth. — Wayfarer
It's a matter of irony that nowadays, the so-called 'realist' interpretations of physics are often said to be the 'parallel universes' of Hugh Everett or the various permutations of the multiverse suggested by string theorists. If you look back at Bohr and Heisenberg's philosophical musings on QM (retrospectively named the 'Copenhagen Interpretation'), they seem lucid - and parsimonious - by comparison. — Wayfarer
Well, isn't that sort of like the yin-yang duality that is supposed to be the manifestation of Tao? :) The first quote was an intuitive/holistic characterization of existence while the second was an analytic/logical specification of what existence is and how it is instantiated in the structure of reality. I am sorry if this specification was confusing, I just tried to pack it into a few sentences. — litewave
I'm sorry to burst the bubble here but I find the Tao Te Ching to be like a horoscope - ambiguous and vague enough to fool people into believing something which they really wouldn't. — TheMadFool
If I'm trying to interpret that so that it has things right, I'd take it to simply be a map/territory distinction. The map is not the territory, but we can only "speak the map." Or in other words, the world isn't like natural language, except for that part of the world that is natural language. The same goes for mathematical language, logic, etc. — Terrapin Station
To claim that the world is illogical is to claim that the world is not what it is. Therefore, the world is not illogical. The claim refutes itself. — litewave
I guess I'm saying that I feel the Tao points more towards the interplay between the objective and subjective then it being interchangeable with objective reality. — Gooseone
Do you assume that because you don't get what I get, that it doesn't have value? — T Clark
However, it worries me that such a view could be wishful thinking growing out of a fertile imagination, and that we know, bottomline, is self-deception. — TheMadFool
The Tao is not logical or illogical. — T Clark
Or do you think logic is the fundamental basis of reality? From what you've written, I think you probably do. — T Clark
If the world isn't like logic then the world is like logic. — litewave
No idea how that makes any sense to you. — Terrapin Station
Question: is the "DEALTHmatch"in the thread title intentional, or a typo? If intended, could you please explain? Thanks! — 0 thru 9
"The Tao that can be spoken is not the eternal Tao." — T Clark
They imply one universe with a (possibly finite) number of branches in superposition. — Andrew M
And just what would 'a branch' be, in plain language? — Wayfarer
For the simple reason that 'to speak of' is to locate within the realm of phenomena,
— Wayfarer
Or to go from non-being into being. To be created. — T Clark
I asked the question, what would a 'branch' be, in relation to 'a universe which branches'. That's a much bigger deal than a 'thought experiment'. — Wayfarer
Let me take a shot if I may, since I have interest and this model seems most plausible to me. I agree with AndrewM's responses except for the double-slit one just above.I asked the question, what would a 'branch' be, in relation to 'a universe which branches'. That's a much bigger deal than a 'thought experiment'. — Wayfarer
Actually I don't think that is the point - it's overly theist. The standard Taoist description for the phenomenonal domain is 'the ten thousand things'; which is contrasted to 'the nameless' which is the source of the ten thousand things. But there's nothing corresponding to 'creation' in that; it's more that the sage 'merges with the nameless' through contemplation or concentrated action. 'Flow', they call it nowadays. But I don't think it's a linear 'creation story' in the Biblical sense. — Wayfarer
They have built a Schrodinger's box, but not one that holds a cat. The before-before experiment relies on taking a measurement, but not revealing the results of it for a time, which requires effectively such a box. Any other QM interpretation seems to require the ability to alter the past to explain that experiment. — noAxioms
They have built a Schrodinger's box, but not one that holds a cat. The before-before experiment relies on taking a measurement, but not revealing the results of it for a time, which requires effectively such a box. Any other QM interpretation seems to require the ability to alter the past to explain that experiment. — noAxioms
Let me take a shot if I may, since I have interest and this model seems most plausible to me. I agree with AndrewM's responses except for the double-slit one just above. — noAxioms
However there are also the distinct photon/slit interactions that occur. These constitute "measurements" between the photon and the apparatus independent of observer interaction and so also result in branching. The observed interference effect when we detect the photon on the back screen just is the interference of those branches (which is quantified as the sum of the wave amplitudes from both branches). — Andrew M
For all of us here, when we get to the end, all we have is trust in ourselves, our judgment, and our experience. Thinking about it now, maybe that is the fundamental fact of philosophy. — T Clark
What seems to help me is to have self-confidence on one hand balanced by a healthy self-skepticism on the other hand — 0 thru 9
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