Hard to find links that don't spin an interpretation of the data, but this is brief description.Do you have a link? — T Clark
My interpretation of double-slit differs, but being an interpretation, there's no fact to it.Nice post, but I'm curious about where we might disagree.
In the double-slit experiment, the detection of the photon at the back screen is not the only interaction that occurs in the system. It's just the obvious one since it involves someone observing it.
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
Western philosophy warns us against it. Trust in ourselves is often betrayed. Isn't this why logic and rationality are so vehemently emphasized? We need an unbiased and reliable mediator between us and reality. That role is currently played by logic and it's doing a fine job. — TheMadFool
The Tao doesn't diminish the importance of reason and logic. In fact I think, owing to its poetic composition, it relies heavily on the reader's logic to infer the message the Tao wishes to convey. — TheMadFool
That said, I think logic and rationality aren't enough to comprehend the whole of reality. Logic and reason fail at the scale of atoms and the universe. Didn't someone say ''if the only tool you have is a hammer, everything starts looking like a nail.'' Also ''the heart has reasons the mind knows not''. — TheMadFool
It is nothing but a wave function with probabilities of where it will be measured, and that function results in a wave interference pattern beyond the slits. The slits alter the wave function but no more. — noAxioms
Strongly disagree with the second sentence. The Tao can't be understood, only experienced. — T Clark
I think logic and rationality miss a lot at whatever scale you use them. As I said, to me, the Tao doesn't have anything to do with the heart. — T Clark
So, the Tao Te Ching is trying to express the inexpressible. This puzzles me. I too have had experiences that make my rational side uncomfortable - the vague feeling that reality hides a truth, that something wondrous lies beneath the surface, waiting to be understood/(in your words) experienced. However, this feeling is so difficult to analyze rationally that it frustrates me. Is it the same for you? — TheMadFool
An interesting notion. A measurement is being taken without a conscious observer. — Rich
Just consder what that actually says — Wayfarer
The measurement on the back screen results in one point, not a pattern, and only repeated runs reveal such a pattern. — noAxioms
It's not rational. It requires a surrender. — T Clark
Get a copy of the Tao te Ching. — T Clark
No - don't rephrase it. Consider the meaning of the three words: 'the universe branches'. Leave the double-slit out of it - just think about what is being claimed. — Wayfarer
that 'branching' means what it says - every outcome happens in as many universes as there are outcomes - which is infinitely many. It doesn't matter whether you endorse it or not - that is what the theory entails. — Wayfarer
branching does not entail more than one universe. — Andrew M
MWI's main conclusion is that the universe (or multiverse in this context) is composed of a quantum superposition of very many, possibly even non-denumerably infinitely many, increasingly divergent, non-communicating parallel universes or quantum worlds
The implication is that there are infinitely many universes existing in parallel, in which everything that happens is replicated infinitely many times. — Wayfarer
your quote explicitly does not exclude a finite number of branches — Andrew M
the universe proper need not be limited to what can be directly seen — Andrew M
You could try to show how that specific scenario has problems that you think are of concern. — Andrew M
Everett’s scientific journey began one night in 1954, he recounted two decades later, “after a slosh or two of sherry.” He and his Princeton classmate Charles Misner and a visitor named Aage Petersen (then an assistant to Niels Bohr) were thinking up “ridiculous things about the implications of quantum mechanics.” During this session Everett had the basic idea behind the many-worlds theory, and in the weeks that followed he began developing it into a dissertation.
The point is just that interactions between systems result in the entanglement of those systems. Observers are not special in this regard. — Andrew M
There are free versions online — T Clark
The Tao that can be called is not the Tao
erhaps as one member said, it's as close an approximation to the truth as language will allow. Then I began to wonder if Lao Tze were alive today would his work be accepted in a reputed philosophical journal? If yes, why? If no, why? — TheMadFool
Very succinct and to the point and quite prescient of quantum physics (note the wave symbol that represents the Genesis). — Rich
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