- #106
Maaneli
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JesseM said:The universe has an objectively real state at every moment, I don't know what it would mean to say "the universe is something objectively real" apart from this.
Can you define what a 'state' is?
JesseM said:The definition is broad--in some universes satisfying the definition it might be possible to break down the "state of the universe at a given moment" into a collection of local states of each point in space at that time, but in others it might not be.
The only universe I am concerned about is one in which the principle of local causality is applicable.
JesseM said:Instead of saying that a theory is "local" or "nonlocal" as a whole, let's say that some mathematically-definable element of a theory is local if 1) all facts about the value of this element can be broken down into local facts about individual points in spacetime, and 2) the value at one point is only causally influenced by local facts in the point's past light cone. So in this case, if the "element" in the copenhagen interpretation is the density matrix for a measurement at a single place and time, then I think it'd make sense to say this element is local even if the copenhagen interpretation is not realist, and even though other elements of the theory like the wavefunction for entangled particles cannot really be considered local. In the case of a local realist theory, the "element" would consist of all objective facts about the state of the universe.
If the 'element' would consist of all objective facts about the state of the universe, then the density matrix cannot be part of them. A density matrix represents a state of knowledge about a system, not the objects facts about the system.
In any case, based on what you said, it seems that you would have to define a locally causal theory as one in which every objectively real element of a theory satisfies your 1) and 2). So if someone denies your definition of realism, then you cannot even formulate a locally causal theory.
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